Friday, July 3, 2009
Protest the coup in Honduras 5pm Fri 3 July
Military Coup in Honduras
End the Coup! Sanctions Against the Coup Regime Now!
Speak Out:
Friday 3 July 5pm
Cnr Hay & Williams Streets (outside Wesley Church)
This Friday a protest will take place to condemn the military coup against the democratically elected Honduran President Zelaya. We are demanding that the Australian government:
1. Unequivocally condemn the coup;
2. Refuse to recognise the coup regime and end all diplomatic ties until Zelaya is safely returned to office;
3. Support international sanctions against the coup regime.
For more information, phone Nick Everett (0409 762 081), Alex Bainbridge (0413 976 638), Vinnie Molina (0419 812 872)
Restore democracy in Honduras!
A statement from the Socialist Alliance, Australia, July 2, 2009
The Socialist Alliance strongly condemns the June 28 coup d’etat by the military, members of the oligarchy and their political agents in Honduras. The violent kidnapping and expulsion to Costa Rica of democratically-elected President Manuel Zelaya Rosales is an attempt to deny the people of Honduras their fundamental human rights to determine their own government and political future.
The coup took place as millions of Hondurans were preparing to exercise their right to vote for the first time in a consultative referendum on the future convening of a constitutional assembly to reform Honduras’ constitution. The Zelaya government’s proposal to draft a new constitution is the culmination of other measures under his presidency that have come under attack by conservative forces, including a significant raise in the minimum wage, measures to re-nationalise energy generation plants and telecommunications, signing a bill to greatly improve labour conditions for teachers, joining the Venezuelan Petrocaribe program, and delaying recognition of the new United States ambassador after the Bolivian government implicated the US embassy in supporting paramilitary groups destabilising Bolivia.
The Socialist Alliance also condemns the June 28 assassination by the armed forces of Honduran congressperson Cesar Ham, the organiser of the consultative referendum on a new constitution, and the abduction of Honduran foreign minister Patricia Rodas. The assault and attempted kidnapping on the Venezuelan, Cuban and Nicaraguan ambassadors in Honduras, who were trying to protect Rodas was a direct attack on the Bolivarian movement for unity and progressive change in Latin America.
The Socialist Alliance is very concerned for the safety of the human rights organisations that have supported the president and the efforts for constitutional reform. Reports of the military pursuing civil society leaders in the street and of leaders of the National Council of Indigenous Peoples being forced into hiding must be responded to be all who support freedom.
We applaud and stand in solidarity with the thousands of brave Hondurans who have mobilised to defend democracy by demonstrating in the streets and attempting to exercise their right to participate in the referendum despite intimidation and assault by the armed forces. We also solidarise with the Honduran trade unions and social movements calling for a general strike in support of their ousted president.
The Socialist Alliance congratulates the nine governments of ALBA, the Organization of American States, and the UN General Assembly president Miguel D’Escoto for their immediate condemnation of the coup and support for Zelaya as the only legitimate president of Honduras. We note that the European Union and numerous governments have condemned the coup, and call on the Australian government to:
We pledge the Socialist Alliance’s active solidarity with the Honduran people’s fight for democracy and justice, and will continue to protest until the coup is overturned and democratic rights are reinstalled in Honduras. For further information: Lisa Macdonald 0413 031 108 |
More background information and articles:
Coup & mass resistance in Honduras
Resistance and Repression in Honduras
Honduras: Old Coup Strategy, Different Stage
Coups and Constitutions: From Bolivia to Honduras