Honduran leader wants pact
TEGUCIGALPA, Honduras – Ousted President Manuel Zelaya said Friday that a U.S.-brokered pact would restore him to power in about a week, ending Honduras’ isolation four months after soldiers flew the leftist leader into exile in his pajamas.
The agreement is a U.S. foreign policy victory but casts doubt on Latin America’s ability to work out its own problems without Washington’s help. In the four months since the coup, talks repeatedly broke down as the government of President Obama tried to let Latin American governments take the lead.
In the end, the top U.S. envoy for the Americas flew in Wednesday and won a deal the following night – a month before presidential elections the U.S. and other countries warned would not be recognized if held under the government that took power in the June 28 coup.
The power-sharing agreement calls for Congress to decide whether to reinstate Zelaya and allow him to serve the remaining three months of his term.
And while it imposed no deadline, Zelaya told The Associated Press on Friday that he expected a decision in “more or less a week.” Meanwhile, he said, he would remain at the Brazilian Embassy in Tegucigalpa, where he took refuge after slipping back into the country Sept. 21.
“I’m not going anywhere,” he said.
Assistant U.S. Secretary of State Thomas Shannon said the two sides made concessions after realizing the warning that the November election would not be recognized was serious.
“There was no more space for them to dither,” Shannon said at a news conference in the Honduran capital, Tegucigalpa.
He cautioned “there are a variety of moving parts to this agreement” and said he would stay in Honduras while the two sides negotiated the details.
Negotiators submitted the agreement to Congress for consideration Friday.










