Honduras takes dispute against Brazil to UN court

AMSTERDAM (Reuters) – Honduras de facto government has started proceedings at the UN court in The Hague to stop Brazil giving refuge to ousted President Manuel Zelaya in its embassy in Tegucigalpa.

Brazil immediately disputed the move, saying that government had no standing to file it.
Zelaya has been in the embassy since last month following a military coup after he angered business leaders, the military and political rivals by moving Honduras closer to Venezuela’s socialist president, Hugo Chavez.

In its application to the International Court of Justice (ICJ) to lodge a legal case against Brazil, the de facto Honduran government says Zelaya and others are using the embassy as a platform for political propaganda and threatening peace and public order.