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Honduras: No One’s Idea of an Electoral Fiesta PDF Print E-mail
Written by Lisa Haugaard   
Tuesday, 24 November 2009
“Vote? Me? No way? For what?”  said the young man, almost spitting out the words. “What is there to vote for in this election?”

All over Honduras, youth “in resistance,” women in resistance, artists in resistance, lawyers in resistance, well-dressed and blackberried political party leaders in resistance, campesinos in resistance, are saying no to these November 29th elections. While the word “resistance” may conjure up images of masked guerrillas, this image is totally misleading. As I could see in a trip this week to Tegucigalpa, it is, so far, in general an extraordinarily peaceful, civic resistance.

And yet to other Hondurans, elections seem like a way out of the terrible mess they have found themselves in. For many better-off Hondurans, exaggerated fears of a Chavez-style takeover fuel their support of the coup, and elections will bring them, they hope, a stamp of approval that the international community has, they feel, mysteriously withheld. And many Hondurans who did not support the coup are thinking, if only we can get through the elections, maybe things will calm down, maybe life will return to normal.

And yet an election so illegitimate will leave scars that are hard to heal. 

Possibly the last chance at having an election accepted as legitimate by coup opponents came when de facto leader Roberto Micheletti refused to step down and the Honduran Congress delayed voting on the restoration of President Manuel Zelaya as had been established in a cobbled-together October accord. Micheletti’s subsequent offer to abstain from exercising presidential powers for six days around the election is seen as “ni gallo ni gallina” (“neither rooster nor hen”) by puzzled Hondurans. 

Independent candidate Carlos H. Reyes withdrew from the presidential race stating that there were not adequate conditions for an election, while some other leftist party members running for the Congress remained in the game. Deposed president Manuel Zelaya remains holed up in the Brazilian Embassy, and the streets around the embassy are barricaded and manned by police.

U.S. diplomat Tom Shannon’s apparent endorsement of the elections despite this backtracking by the Micheletti regime was seen as a betrayal by Hondurans opposed to the coup, although subsequently a State Department spokesman said the United States will wait to see what happens on Election Day. The multiplicity of confusing statements from the United States frustrates them.  “How can the most powerful nation on earth not manage to have a united message?” one asked.  “If they United States really wanted to overturn this coup,” I heard more than once, in a common if perhaps not realistic evaluation, “They’d just have to snap their fingers.”

Whether or not electoral fraud occurs, the minimal conditions needed for campaigning in the lead up to free and fair elections do not exist. A state of emergency was declared via decree number PCM-M-30-0009 on November 19th “for all activities related to the general elections that take place on November 29th, to guarantee the right to vote [and] the transport, custody and monitoring of electoral materials.” The emergency decree authorizes the Defense Ministry to obtain whatever resources needed for “military operations to guarantee the right to vote.”

Even prior to this emergency decree, other decrees or declarations limiting civil liberties remain in effect, including one that requires public meetings of more than 20 people to obtain police permission twenty-four hours in advance, and another restricting the use of loudspeakers. According to the human rights group CIPRODEH, these are applied selectively, not enforced on the two main political parties but on the smaller parties and social movements. A decree authorizing the government to suspend licenses of radio and TV stations and other media for disturbing social peace remains in effect. Television news programs are one-sided, with newscasters portraying any call to abstain from voting as unpatriotic and painting a picture of clean and well-run elections. One of the few TV stations incorporating other perspectives, station 36, while now back on the air has its signal jammed outside of Tegucigalpa. Even within Tegucigalpa, according to human rights groups its signal is interfered with and its news broadcast replaced, inexplicably, with old cowboy movies—as I saw myself this week as I was clicking around for news. You can read more background information in May I Speak Freely Media’s article “Fear and Loathing in Honduras: Elections Under Repression.”

As one entrepreneur skeptical of the elections told me, “Exactly which electoral fiesta are they talking about?”

Five thousand army reservists have been mobilized around the elections, and the armed forces are playing a role in delivering ballots. Soldiers have been seen on the buses handing out leaflets encouraging people to vote. One observer noted, “The army is like a dragon that had been sleeping, and now it is awake.”

While some twenty deaths of Hondurans at the hands of army and police remain largely uninvestigated and unprosecuted, according to the Honduran human rights group CIPRODEH, Honduran judicial agencies are prosecuting people for violating curfews and protesting. The Attorney General has pledged to prosecute people for calling for an electoral boycott, an offense under Honduran law.

In an on-target Time magazine article, senior policy director at the Council of the Americas asserted, "You can't use an election to clean the slate after a coup. It just threatens to roll back democratic norms in Central America by decades."

The U.S. government must not put a stamp of approval on elections under these conditions.  

Add Comment
  • Posted by: Suzanne on 25/11/09 01:52:14
    This is such a disappointing, one-sided report. I used to trust LAWG, but after their reports on Honduras, I'm questioning EVERYTHING they've ever written.

    It completely misleads readers by failing to report that the military is ALWAYS involved in Honduran elections, not just this time. It makes it seem as if curfews are still an on-going issue (which they haven't been for weeks) and denounces the requirement of permits for large gatherings and limitations on loudspeakers, as if we don't have similar rules here in the US. And her pacifist "resistance" are the same ones responsible for the looting, destruction, and violence in support of Zelaya when he returned and holed up in the Brazilian embassy on 9/21/09. There is actual evidence of that, as opposed to the supposed human rights violations by the military and police. Instead, I've seen Zelayista protesters throwing rocks and bottles at them or even outright hitting them, as the soldiers peacefully continue about their work.

    And, if that weren't enough, it places ALL the blame for the current situation on Micheletti while ignoring all of the crimes Zelaya carried out and Zelaya's refusal to abide by the accord even while Micheletti complies with his. I think Micheletti's done amazingly well given the mess he was left to clean up and the fact that he didn't choose to become President - he was just next in line constitutionally.

    I truly hope that the elections go smoothly without the violence threatened by the Zelayistas, that the Honduran Congress votes "NO" on the question of Zelaya's reinstatement, that Zelaya is tried for all of his crimes against the Honduran people and Constitution, and that peace can finally be restored to Honduras after all these months of tension caused by Zelaya.

    Viva Honduras!
  • Ms
    Posted by: Marie Fitzsimmons on 25/11/09 04:12:35
    We need to stop supporting and creating corrupt military machines, used against the poor and working class people in South America. These militaries are trained and supported by the US, and are also the reason the drug traaffic is so prevalent.
  • Posted by: Harry on 26/11/09 07:15:11
    Great comment, Suzanne. You hit the nail on the head about what is really going on down here on the ground. The original article is full of half truths and outright lies. How do people come up with this stuff?
  • Posted by: James Owen Collins on 26/11/09 10:23:40
    Thanks to Suzanne and Harry for their forthright support for the overthrow of democratically elected governments and their replacement with military-supported plutocratic oligarchy! Clearly the real problem in Honduras is the presence of unruly crowds demanding a return to democracy, not the soldiers and police gassing, shooting and torturing those same folks!
  • Posted by: Stephanie on 26/11/09 01:16:49
    Many thanks to Suzanne & Harry... I fully concur that this piece of writing (I won't refer to it as journalism!) is based on half truths and outright lies, with a topping of gross misinformation. I commend all Hondurans who have withstood international pressures to try and uphold their own democratic constitution. These past five months have also shown me just how appalling media practises can be and how simple minded those followers of far, far left wing socialism can be with their mindless repetition of pat phrases. Oh, point of information Ms. -- Honduras is in Central America. Vive Honduras! Stephanie
  • trutherator
    Posted by: Alan on 26/11/09 02:52:33
    The twenty "mysterious" deaths are more likely of detractors of Mel Zelaya's Chavez-supported auto-coup which was stopped by the Honduran CIVILIAN government itself on June 28, when the legitimate government was restored.

    Micheletti's nephew, a colonel, beatings of Congressmen by the Mel-coup supporters, bombings by them, kidnappings, these are a few of the attempts by some Chavista-Zelaya dictatorship supporters to disrupt peace.

    The massive support by the overwhelming majority --some 85 percent and growing form there-for the interim government and against Zelaya and against dictatorship and against the imperialist interventionist policies of outsiders from Venezuela and Nicaragua cannot be hidden.

    Lies from socialist mouthpieces supported by the richest capitalists in the world, like George Soros, cannot silence the truth.

    --Alan
  • Program Director, Chicago Religious Leadership Network on Latin America
    Posted by: Gary Cozette on 28/11/09 04:08:39
    Free & fair elections in Honduras on Sunday November? Not possible under the current coup regime!

    Coup plotters and their military or police are responsible for the murder of over 25 unarmed civilians who have participated in non-violent public protests denouncing the coup, which has been declared illegal by the United Nations, the Organization of American States, and President Obama himself.

    Most recently, Gradis Espinal, a 56-year-old school teacher and rural coup resistance leader, was brutally murdered last Sunday, November 22. Since the coup began, more than a hundred unarmed civilians have been severely beaten, and as many as 1,000 or more have been arbitrarily arrested. Free and fair elections cannot be legitimate under this cloud of intimidation and impunity.

    Thank you LAWG for this timely and helpful report resulting from your recent visit to Honduras. I hope you will immediately forward your findings to members of the U.S. Congress and the Obama Administration.
Tags: 2009, Lisa Haugaard, Blog Posts, Honduras
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