Honduras pressure mounts, U.S. wants deal “now”

TEGUCIGALPA, (Reuters) – The United States and  Europe stepped up pressure on Honduras’ de facto government yesterday as deposed President Manuel Zelaya and his supporters  called on Washington to pave the way for his return.

With negotiations deadlocked and Zelaya vowing to return to  Honduras within days, some fear Central America’s worst crisis  since the end of the Cold War could flare into violence.

Talks mediated by Costa Rican President Oscar Arias  collapsed over the weekend but he hopes to bring both sides  back to the negotiating table on Wednesday..

The U.S. government threw its weight behind Arias’ proposal  that Zelaya, who was toppled in a June 28 coup, be reinstated  to set up a coalition government.

“We’re in constant contact with a number of countries in  the hemisphere regarding the situation in Honduras, and we  believe the Arias mediation is the right way to go, and the  time is now to … resolve this issue,” State Department deputy  spokesman Robert A. Wood told reporters.

“We think that this is the best (way) … to restore the  constitutional order in the country, and we want to see that  happen now,” he said.

The government that took power when Zelaya was toppled has  not been recognized by any other country, but it refuses to  allow his return to power and vows to arrest him on arrival. The crisis is testing President Barack Obama as he seeks to  improve U.S. relations with Latin America, where a growing bloc  of leftist leaders that includes Zelaya has challenged  Washington’s influence in recent years.

Obama has already cut $16.5 million in military aid to  Honduras but has let Arias and the Organization of American  States take the lead on diplomatic efforts to end the crisis.

He faces pressure from Latin American heavyweight Brazil  and other countries in the region who want more pressure on  Honduras’ de facto government but at home some Republicans in  Congress feel Obama is showing too much support to Zelaya.

Speaking from exile in Nicaragua, Zelaya said he would soon  be back in Honduras.

“It is impossible to sustain a regime with bayonets. The  world will not allow it, starting with the United States,” he  said in an interview with Honduras’ Radio Globo.

Zelaya was expelled from the textile and coffee exporting  country in his pajamas in the middle of the night, accused of  violating the constitution by trying to extend presidential  term limits. The army threw him out of the country after the  Supreme Court ordered his arrest.

His rivals say he was also seeking to turn the  traditionally conservative country into a satellite of  Venezuela’s firebrand leftist President Hugo Chavez.

Zelaya has repeatedly said his supporters have the right to  insurrection but he said on Tuesday he was against any military  intervention and would return “peacefully”.

He made a failed bid to return to Honduras earlier this  month. Soldiers blocked the runway and at least one protester  was killed in clashes with the army.

Brazilian Foreign Minister Celso Amorim called U.S.  Secretary of State Hillary Clinton last week to complain that  talks were dragging on too long and that Zelaya should be  reinstated without conditions, a Brazilian diplomat said.