Skip to content or view screen version

Support the Honduran people in this important struggle to beat back the coup. O

Al Giordano, General Joe and friends | 17.07.2009 04:00 | Analysis | Anti-militarism | Globalisation | World

"Narco News can confirm, together with reports in other media, that at least three of those four routes - the three most important - have been successfully shut down by peaceful occupations by a citizenry opposed to the coup d'etat regime, as well as vital arteries in the country's northern coastal regions."

Support the Honduran people in this important struggle to beat back the coup. Obama
is sure not going to do it.

-----

Day 19: Peaceful Blockades vs. Coup Paralyze Honduras
Posted by Al Giordano - July 16, 2009 at 11:48 am
By Al Giordano

Take a look at the roadmap of Honduras, above.
In the lower center is the capital city of Tegucigalpa, with only four routes connecting it to the rest of the country and the continent.
Narco News can confirm, together with reports in other media, that at least three of those four routes - the three most important - have been successfully shut down by peaceful occupations by a citizenry opposed to the coup d'etat regime, as well as vital arteries in the country's northern coastal regions.
The most important - which links Tegucigalpa to the second largest city, San Pedro Sula to the Northwest - is blocked five kilometers outside of the capital, in the town of El Durazno, reports the French Press Agency (AFP):
"There are also blockades in the Southern Highway, between Juiticalpa and Limones (150 kilometer east of the Capital), between Santa Rosa de Copán and the borders of Guatemala and El Salvador (450 kilometers to the Northeast and in Choloma, in the highway to Puerto Cortés (250 kilometers to the north)..."
(Chomula is an industrial center for multi-national sweatshops, where the workers have taken up the struggle to topple the coup regime.)
"All the protests will be peaceful," social leader Rafael Alegría told the pro-coup daily La Prensa. Israel Salinas of the United Workers Federation of Honduras (CUTH, in its Spanish initials), the largest bloc of labor unions in the country, confirmed earlier this morning that its members had targeted and would join in the blockades nationwide: “In Tegucigalpa, San Pedro Sula and other areas where the conditions exist to execute these blockades at strategic points, that will be done." Hours later, the CUTH and other social organizations have complied with their promise.
La Prensa also confirmed: "The San Pedro Sula-Santa Rosa de Copán Highway is blocked at Gracias Lempira." Radio Globo just confirmed that report, counting the blockaders "in the thousands."
Reporter Brian Flores of the daily El Libertador in Tegucigalpa phoned in to Radio Progreso (listen to it here) to confirm that the highway southbound from Tegucigalpa toward El Salvador is totally cut-off.
Radio Globo confirms (listen at that link) that the northern, southern and western routes from and to Tegucigalpa are paralyzed.
Union organizations in Nicaragua and El Salvador have announced that they will close the border routes with Honduras in solidarity with the Honduran blockades.
If you study the map, above, of the few highways in Honduras that connect its commercial centers, the confirmed reports indicate that the popular protests have already shut down the veins and arteries of country's economy. It is highly likely that other roads and highways are also now under blockade, but we are taking great pains to report only those ones upon which we have been able to confirm. Readers unfamiliar with the condition of secondary roads in Honduras may not be aware that once one of these main highways is shut down, there are no alternate routes.
This is the strategy that, from 2003 to 2005, toppled three repressive presidents in the nation of Bolivia, one after the other.
These current blockades in Honduras have been called, initially, for 48 hours, beginning this morning. Check back here for around-the-clock updates.
This is a major news story. It doesn't matter that the rest of the English language international media is slow to report it. Maybe their correspondents are caught in traffic? Honduras under the coup has now ground to a halt. This, kind readers, is history in the making...
Update 2:14 p.m. ET, 12:14 p.m. in Tegucigalpa: AP has a report in Spanish confirming much of this information. Rafael Alegria of Via Campesina - one of the 30 social organizations participating in the blockades - tells reporters: "You can verify, here, that there is not a single machete knife, pistol or rifle. This is a peaceful march."
Update 2:25 p.m. ET, 12:25 p.m. in Tegucigalpa: One hour ago, in the highway to Catacamas (in the eastern part of the map, above), a coup military convoy plowed forward over the peaceful blockaders and one of its trucks ran over two people, according to a live report right now on Radio Globo.
2:36 p.m. ET, 12:36 p.m. in Tegucigalpa: Prensa Latina reports that among the locations to which the blockade has successfully closed ingress and egress is the national park at Copán, site of excavated Mayan ruins and the crown jewel of Honduran tourism.
2:40 p.m. ET, 12:40 p.m. in Tegucigalpa: Congressman and presidential candidate in the upcoming November 29 elections Cesar Ham, exiled under death threats from the coup regime (and errantly reported dead for some hours in the early days of the coup) has just landed at the Toncontin International Airport. "We have returned anew with much enthusiasm and desire to accompany our people to reestablish the democratic order in our country and to demand the immediate and unconditional return of President Zelaya," he told reporters upon arrival.
3:24 p.m. ET, 1:24 p.m. in Tegucigalpa: Here's an AFP photo of the blockade at Durazno on the Tegucigalpa-San Pedro Sula highway:

A picture is worth a thousand words...
4:09 p.m. ET, 2:09 p.m. in Tegucigalpa: The human rights organization Comité para la Defensa de los Derechos Humanos en Honduras (Cofadeh) reports that between the coup of June 28 and July 11, the regime committed more than 1,000 documented violations of the human rights of citizens. The 1,155 documented violations 1,046 illegal arrests of Honduran citizens. Those numbers include only very serious cases, and only those that the human rights organization has been able to document, and do not include acts of intimidation and threats, which have also been widespread.

Please spread far and wide. General Joe and friends

-----

Juanes Cancels Oligarch’s “Concert for Peace” in Honduras
Posted by Al Giordano - July 16, 2009 at 9:29 pm
By Al Giordano

Juan Esteban Aristizábal Vásquez, a.k.a. the Latin Grammy award winning pop singer known as Juanes, almost got sucked into a trap by the business interests behind the Honduras coup d’etat: a “Concert for Peace” that had been scheduled for Saturday, July 26 in Tegucigalpa.
All day long members the pro-coup faction on the #Honduras Twitter feed (mainly a gaggle of ex-Cubans and ex-Venezuelans who type a lot about “communists” and “reds” in their zeal to defend the coup) were agog, thanking the Miami-based Colombian Juanes and also Spaniard pop star Alejandro Sanz and Colombian Carlos Vives, for lending themselves to the spectacle of “peace” under a repressive coup regime.
Back on July 6, the 36-year-old Juanes - a public ally in his native country of rightist President Alvaro Uribe - posted via Twitter: “Honduras, I am thinking a lot about you… get well soon… not one more painful tear, not one more drop of blood.”
It was reminiscent of the moment back in 2001 when Mexico’s two national television networks organized a “Concert for Peace” as counter-programming to the Zapatista caravan’s arrival in Mexico City, announcing that the Mexican pop groups Los Jaguares, Maná, and Carlos Santana would perform. Singer-songwriter Julieta Venegas denounced the charade and Santana told reporters he had never agreed to lend his name to any such venture. The polemic led to one scene, covered by this reporter, on the Zócalo (city square) of Puebla, Mexico, where 50,000 poblano youths, upon the mention of Los Jaguares and Maná, began chanting in unison, “culeros, culeeeeeroooos,” roughly translated as “asswipes.”
Well, back in Miami today, Juanes thought better of ending up as a prop in a similar spectacle, and cancelled the Honduras concert with some Twitter messages of his own that read, in succession:
Honduras, the Peace Without Borders concert that we’ve been talking about is not going to take place…
This, for various reasons… artists and production scheduled and of course political uncertainty…
Which do not guarantee a truly clean concert for us…
All of us are with the people of Honduras and our greatest desire is that civil society return to normality…
We have to avoid political manipulation from any sector. Peace Without Borders is a politically neutral organization…
And its only flag is peace. A hug.
And with that, the 17-time Latin Grammy award winning pop star extricated himself from the manipulation that the coup backers had tried to rope him into… as goes the concert, so goes the coup... a metaphor for what Honduran Civil Society is also doing today.

As with the other note----send it far and wide. Joe

Al Giordano, General Joe and friends

Comments

Display the following comment

  1. Support the people of Honduras — Dom