Honduras: farmworkers freed, Micheletti meltdown
Good news (if accurate; will post another source when I find it): The farmworkers imprisoned for their long occupation of the National Agrarian Institute have been released. The down side is that they'll supposedly be subject to house arrest. That sounds sinister, but how easy or likely is it to be enforced against several dozen farmworkers scattered around the country in remote rural locations? What this account doesn't note is that the campesinos driven forcibly from the Institute a week ago had been held together in a single cell, and had launched a hunger strike. Their release is a small but real victory won by their own struggle.
Not good news, but not a real surprise: Micheletti continues to be intransigent. Speaking to the press last night after the "dialogue" had ended for the day, he went into a tirade against the OAS delegation [video, via Doug Zylstra in comments at RAJ's]. No one from this government seems inclined to say a word about the continuing illegal state of siege, or to do anything else that might provide a reality check for the coup crew.
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Labels: culture of impunity, Honduras, human rights

3 Comments:
More bad news though: http://chris-floyd.com/component/content/article/1-latest-news/1855-vile-bodies-reagan-revenants-return-to-enforce-empires-agenda-.html
That murder pisses me off.
Bad news: Radio Globo says the PFP has placed a hydraulic platform in front of the Brazilian embassy. Snipers. Infrared cameras. They're almost inside the embassy.
They're taking the harassment up a notch.
--Charles
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