Honduras crisis talks end in failure

SAN JOSE, Costa Rica, (Reuters) – Honduras’ deposed  President Manuel Zelaya and the de facto government that ousted  him in a coup failed yesterday to end the country’s political  crisis as two days of talks collapsed.

Minutes after the negotiations in Costa Rica fell apart,  Zelaya told Reuters that “no one can stop me” from returning to  Honduras, a move that the U.S. government has tried to dissuade  him from taking due to fears it would trigger violence.

Roberto Micheletti, the interim leader installed by  Congress following the June 28 military coup, has threatened to  arrest Zelaya if he sets foot in the country and has put the  army on high alert.

A previous attempt by Zelaya to fly home on July 5 was  thwarted by Honduran troops who prevented the plane from  landing in Tegucigalpa. At least one person was killed in  clashes between troops and Zelaya’s supporters at the airport.

The two sides were unable on Sunday to overcome the major  stumbling block in negotiations — Zelaya’s return to power.
Costa Rican President Oscar Arias, the mediator in the  talks, had proposed that Zelaya be allowed back to Honduras in  the coming days to set up a coalition government including  rival parties. But Micheletti refused to back down.

“I’m very sorry, but the proposals that you have presented  are unacceptable to the constitutional government of Honduras,  Micheletti’s envoy Carlos Lopez told Arias in the Costa Rican  capital, San Jose.

Zelaya’s team said it would not continue talks with  representatives of Micheletti, whose presidency has not been  recognized by any foreign government.

“This dialogue with this commission of the de facto,  military coup government is finished,” said Rixi Moncada, a  Zelaya representative at the talks.

Zelaya left the door open to further talks in the future,  but said he thought a negotiated settlement was unlikely.
“You must never close the door on actions of good faith,”  Zelaya told Reuters in a telephone interview from exile in  Nicaragua. “The mediator can continue to make efforts. I do not  think that efforts with coup-mongers, just as with terrorists  and kidnappers, will work.”

Arias held out hope for renewing the dialogue but set  himself a three-day deadline. “My conscience tells me that I  cannot give up and must continue working for at least three  more days and that is what I propose to do,” he said.

Arias plans to talk separately with Zelaya, Micheletti, and  the Organization of American States in coming days. It was not  clear whether he would call another round of negotiations  between the rival sides, possibly for Wednesday.

He warned of political violence in Honduras if diplomacy is  abandoned. “What happens if someone shoots at a soldier and a  soldier shoots his gun at an armed citizen? … Bloodshed that  the Honduran people don’t deserve,” he said.