Wednesday, September 23, 2009

Time Predicts New Violence with Zelaya Return


After exiled Honduran President Manuel Zelaya slipped over the border back into his home country, an article in Time magazine predicts that his return will be met only with more violence.

Doubtful that Zelaya can regain confidence from his countrymen, journalists Tim Padgett and Tim Rogers suggest concern that "worse violence could erupt in one of the hemisphere's poorest countries."

Clashes on Tuesday involving riot police and tear gas seemed to support their argument. Costa Rican President Oscar Arias has been trying to get both Zelaya and de facto President Roberto Micheletti to come to agreement under the "San José Accord," which has yet to occur.

Read more here to find out how the authors think this could shake the hemisphere.

Source and Photo: Time

1 comment:

Anonymous said...

From Clermont
Allowing Zelaya to stay in the Brasilian embassy is in direct violation of Brazil's policy of non-intervention in other country's internal affairs. Interesting twist of events - the US does something in another country with the host country's tacit permission and the left leaning leaders of the region scream until their lungs eject from their bodies. But a Latin American country intervenes in a sovereign state's domestic issue and no one complains - except the sovereign state and Brasil's opposition party. What hypocrisy - how Latin American.