Clinton: Costa Rican to mediate Honduras crisis

Published: Tuesday, July 7, 2009 12:53 p.m. MDT
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WASHINGTON — Secretary of State Hillary Rodham Clinton said Tuesday that Costa Rican President Oscar Arias will serve as international mediator in the Honduran political crisis.

Clinton made the announcement at the State Department after meeting privately with Honduran President Manuel Zelaya, who was forced into exile on June 28.

She said Zelaya as well as the politician who took over as Honduran leader, Roberto Micheletti, agreed to the Arias role as mediator. She said Arias would work on the problem from Costa Rica, not in Honduras.

Clinton noted that Arias won the Nobel Peace Prize in 1987 for helping broker an end to Central America's civil wars. She said she spoke to him earlier Tuesday.

"He is the natural person to assume this role," she told reporters.

Clinton also called on all parties to refrain from further violence in an effort to resolve the political crisis.

She said her meeting with Zelaya was productive.

"I reiterated to him that the United States supports the restoration of the democratic, constitutional order in Honduras," she said.

In Moscow, President Barack Obama said his administration's support for Zelaya, the deposed left-leaning politician who often criticized Washington, was emblematic of his administration's foreign policy.

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"America cannot and should not seek to impose any system of government on any other country, nor would we presume to choose which party or individual should run a country," Obama said in a speech in the Russian capital. "And we haven't always done what we should have on that front."

"Even as we meet here today, America supports now the restoration of the democratically elected president of Honduras, even though he has strongly opposed American policies," he said.

"We do so not because we agree with him," Obama said of Zelaya. "We do so because we respect the universal principle that people should choose their own leaders, whether they are leaders we agree with or not."

The administration has offered only lukewarm support for Zelaya — aimed more at bolstering his legal status as Honduras' duly elected president than supporting him personally.

Zelaya, a wealthy rancher who moved to the left after his election and allied himself with Venezuelan President Hugo Chavez, was ousted on June 28 and sent into exile. He made an unsuccessful attempt to return home over the weekend and said Monday in Nicaragua that he hoped to win greater U.S. support for efforts to regain power.

Zelaya is opposed by all branches of the Honduran government as well as the military, and has even alienated leaders of his own party, which supported the congressional vote to install Micheletti as interim president.

Recent comments

Why does this conflict need to be mediated, the President broke the...

Howard | July 7, 2009 at 1:40 p.m.

Image
Jose Luis Magana, Associated Press

Ousted Honduran President Manuel Zelaya arrives at the State Department in Washington to meet with Secretary of State Hillary Rodham Clinton Tuesday. Zelaya is back in the U.S. after his failed attempt to land in Honduras last Sunday.

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