Honduras
Canada cannot be passive observer of Honduras political crisis
By Troy Media
By Stephen Randall
CALGARY, AB — It has been five months since Honduran President Manuel Zelaya was removed from office and sent into exile by the Honduran military. Since then, Canada, along with the rest of the international community, has watched with concern – at times bewilderment, at other times frustration and anger – that the political crisis has evaded resolution.
By Editor
TEGUCIGALPA, Honduras — Ousted Honduran President Manuel Zelaya insisted late Saturday that he will not accept any deal to restore him to office if it means he must recognize elections later this month.
Obama Doctrine ‘coup’By Frank Gaffney Jr.
Undermine our allies. Embolden our enemies. Diminish our country. If anyone doubted those nine words summed up the Obama Doctrine, look at what the President’s team perpetrated last week in Honduras.
Who’s behind the Obama Honduras policy?By Online
By Nicole Ferrand
The Obama Administration has made serious mistakes in its handling of the crisis in Honduras where it supports the return of the deposed president, Mel Zelaya. The Administration categorized the removal of Zelaya as a coup when, in fact, the Honduran military has had no role in governing the country. The Honduran Congress and Supreme Court abided by their Constitution and rule of law and ousted Zelaya because he had violated the law. As a result, the crisis in Honduras today is almost unmanageable. So what does this behavior reveal about Mr. Obama’s respect for the separation of powers, as Mary Anastasia O’ Grady from the Wall Street Journal accurately points out, that he would instruct Secretary of State Clinton to punish an independent court because it did not issue the ruling he wanted? [1] Is this administration forcing a foreign nation to violate its own laws?
Thursday, 19 November 1863
“Dilexi iustitiam et odi iniquitatem, propteria morior in exilio.”



