Behind the Honduran Mutiny
TEGUCIGALPA, Honduras -- During Honduras' Independence Day celebrations last
September 15, then-President Manuel Zelaya turned up for a time-honored ritual
meant to promote national unity. But rather than merely making the traditional
presidential cry "Long Live the Republic!" Mr. Zelaya treated political, civic
and business leaders to a 15-minute diatribe against capitalism.
"The businessmen and corrupt oligarchy are responsible for our country's two
centuries of poverty because they support an unjust neoliberal economic model
that exploits humans and our natural resources," said Mr. Zelaya, wearing his
trademark white Stetson hat, as members of the crowd began to shout "Fuera!
Fuera! Fuera!" ("Out! Out! Out!").
Forced out of the country last month by the military, Mr. Zelaya returned
Friday -- at least temporarily. Trailed by reporters and talking on a cell
phone, Mr. Zelaya crossed the border into Honduras from his Nicaraguan exile. He
walked to the rusty chain that marks the border, lifted it and walked a few feet
onto his native soil.
Showdown at Honduran Border
Associated Press
A supporter of Honduras' ousted President
Manuel Zelaya waved a Honduran flag in Tegucigalpa Thursday.
"We are unarmed. I come in peace," Mr. Zelaya said, shaking hands with a
Honduran army officer, before retreating back into Nicaragua under threat of
arrest by the provisional Honduran government. U.S. Secretary of State Hillary
Clinton called the stunt "reckless."
It's the latest turn in a growing regional crisis that's far more complicated
than it appears. The episode may seem like a flashback to a tragicomic era of
Latin American history when presidents were regularly overthrown in coups.
That's how the Obama administration has responded so far, voting with the
Organization of American States to suspend Honduras and calling for Mr. Zelaya's
reinstatement.
But in fact, a close look at Mr. Zelaya's time in office reveals a strongly
antidemocratic streak. He placed himself in a growing cadre of elected Latin
presidents who have tried to stay in power past their designated time to carry
out a populist-leftist agenda. These leaders, led by Venezuela's Hugo Chávez,
have used the region's historic poverty and inequality to gain support from the
poor, but created deep divisions in their societies by concentrating power in
their own hands and increasing government control over the economy, media and
other sectors.
Mr. Zelaya, a 56-year-old former rancher and logger with a handlebar
moustache, joined this group, which includes Mr. Chávez, Rafael Correa in
Ecuador, Evo Morales in Bolivia, and Daniel Ortega in Nicaragua. This past week,
Mr. Ortega laid out plans for a referendum to rewrite Nicaragua's Constitution
and allow him to be re-elected indefinitely, something Mr. Chávez has already
achieved in oil-rich Venezuela.
It was such a move that led to trouble in neighboring Honduras. For the past
year, Mr. Zelaya led a drive to rewrite the constitution to abolish term limits.
On the day of his ouster, he was planning a referendum to call a constitutional
assembly, even though the vote had been declared illegal by the country's
Supreme Court.
The crisis has put the Obama administration in a difficult spot. Mindful of
past U.S. support of coups in Latin America, it condemned the ouster and has led
efforts to find a negotiated solution. But its insistence Mr. Zelaya return to
power has angered many middle-class Hondurans, who feel the ouster defended the
country's institutions from a Chávez-style power grab.
"This is a showdown which will determine if the Chavista model triumphs or
not," says Moises Starkman, who advised Mr. Zelaya on special projects and now
works for the interim government in the same capacity.
Little in Mr. Zelaya's background suggested he would become an international
symbol of a democratically elected leader forced from office. Mr. Zelaya is a
product of Olancho, a violent, macho state in central Honduras that is dominated
by pistol-packing landowners who run huge estates. His family, involved in
logging and ranching, has been one of the dominant forces in Olancho for
decades.
One of four children, Mr. Zelaya grew up the son of rural privilege,
distinguished by little but a love for the guitar, Harley Davidsons and horses.
In 1975, when Mr. Zelaya was 23 years old, his father, also named Jose Manuel,
was put on trial for helping army officers torture and murder 14 rural
activists, including two priests. Convicted and sentenced to 20 years in prison,
Mr. Zelaya's father served little more than a year before being freed in a
general amnesty.
The elder Zelaya's incarceration deeply affected his son, friends say. Mr.
Zelaya dropped out of college after a spotty period studying industrial
engineering and went home to Olancho to take care of the family businesses. Mr.
Zelaya visited his incarcerated father often, at times even sleeping in the
prison, says Victor Meza, who served as Mr. Zelaya's last interior minister.
"That shaped him," says Mr. Meza.
As a young man, Mr. Zelaya didn't have strong ideological leanings. He ran
his family's logging operations and eventually became a director of Honduras'
top business organization. He also worked his way up the ranks of the Liberal
Party, the country's oldest and most important political party, serving first as
a deputy then as head of Honduras' social investment fund.
Colleagues say Mr. Zelaya is disorganized and lacks formal education but has
animal-like political instincts. "His background is milking cows, and all of a
sudden he's speaking before the United Nations," says Mr. Meza. Despite his lack
of formal education, Mr. Zelaya is a quick study.
Soon, he was a rising star in the Liberal Party, making an unsuccessful run
for the presidency in 2001. In 2005, he ran again, this time winning the
presidency by a sliver. At his inaugural, Mr. Zelaya threw away his prepared
speech and improvised, making numerous gaffes. "It would be a sign of the way he
would run his government," says Honduran political scientist Miguel Calix.
In his first year, Mr. Zelaya didn't seem very ideological and spent a lot of
time traveling. He was a big spender. On one notable trip to Washington, he took
along a large group, including family members. He handed off his infant
granddaughter to a startled President George W. Bush at a White House ceremony.
Two years into his term, Mr. Zelaya reshuffled his government, bringing into
his cabinet a hard-line cadre of ministers dominated by Patricia Rodas, his
foreign minister. The daughter of a famous right-wing Liberal party leader, Ms.
Rodas has a reputation as a doctrinaire, hard-line Marxist from her university
days.
Even as leftist associates increased their influence on Mr. Zelaya, the world
economy also pushed him leftwards. In 2007, Honduras was hit hard by record high
oil prices. The country imports all its fuel needs, and also has no refining
capacity. That means four companies -- Chevron, Exxon Mobil, Royal Dutch Shell
and the local Dipsa -- control the market, importing the fuel directly and
distributing it through their own service stations. As oil prices climbed,
Honduras, whose power plants run on fuel, was forced to hike electricity prices,
and ration power.
At first, Mr. Zelaya, desperate for relief, tried to lower the cost of
imports by buying oil products in bulk, but the plan failed because the
government didn't have its own oil-storage facilities. So, in 2007, Mr. Zelaya
decreed a cut in fuel prices. But this move led to fuel shortages as importers
complained that the price cuts undermined revenues. By mid 2008, the oil
companies threatened to halt all new investment in Honduras.
Neighboring Nicaragua, which had been getting cut-rate fuel from Caracas
since 2005 under a program called Petrocaribe, had no such problems. A
brainchild of Mr. Chávez, Petrocaribe sells Venezuelan oil at market prices but
allows its 18 member countries to finance a part of the oil at very low interest
rates. As of 2007, Petrocaribe had provided $1.2 billion in financing -- similar
to the Washington-based Inter-American Development Bank's soft loans in that
period.
As Mr. Zelaya fought with foreign oil companies, Mr. Chávez offered cheap
oil. Few here opposed the country's entry into the Venezuelan oil pact when the
Congress approved it in March of 2007. "I pushed hard for Petrocaribe," says
Adolfo Facusse, the head of Honduras' industrialists' chamber and now an
opponent of Mr. Zelaya. Since then, Petrocaribe has provided Mr. Zelaya's
government some $126 million in savings, officials say.
Mr. Zelaya, who at first had kept his distance from Mr. Chávez, was quickly
ensconced in the Venezuelan's tight embrace. "They get along very well, and
trade jokes," says Mr. Meza. "On one trip to Caracas, Chávez joked with Zelaya,
'Mel, where did you tie up your horse?"'
Mr. Zelaya soon copied the Venezuelan's inflammatory rhetoric. In August, Mr.
Zelaya joined the ALBA -- a nine-nation trade and political pact that Mr. Chávez
designed to counter U.S. influence in the region. Its other members include
Bolivia, Cuba, Ecuador, and Nicaragua.
On Aug. 26, Mr. Zelaya joined Mr. Chávez and Nicaragua's Mr. Ortega before an
audience of some 30,000 Hondurans, most of whom the government had paid a few
dollars to attend. "Today we are taking a step towards becoming a government of
the center-left, and if anyone dislikes this, we'll just remove the word
'center' and keep the left," he said.
Mr. Chávez didn't go down well in deeply conservative Honduras. "Any Honduran
who is against joining ALBA is either an idiot or a traitor," the Venezuelan
shouted to the crowds at the ALBA event, where he gave Mr. Zelaya a new
nickname: "Comandante Cowboy."
Like Mr. Chávez, Mr. Zelaya was soon battling most of Honduras' institutions.
Obliged by the constitution to send a budget to Congress by September 15, Mr.
Zelaya refused, alleging various reasons, including that the world's financial
crisis made it impossible for him to draw up numbers.
No one was more disappointed with Mr. Zelaya than his former mentor,
Honduras' Cardinal Oscar Rodriguez, a top candidate to replace the late Pope
John Paul II at the time of the pontiff's death. Cardinal Rodriguez blames Mr.
Zelaya for using public money to promote his referendum instead of spending it
on the poor. Earlier this year, cameras at Honduras' Central Bank caught
government officials withdrawing about $2 million from its vaults in a suitcase,
presumably to fund Mr. Zelaya's referendum drive. Three of Mr. Zelaya's former
top officials, and Mr. Zelaya himself, have been charged with misappropriating
public funds in that case. The officials deny the charges and say they are
politically motivated.
"We were good friends. But he changed drastically," the Cardinal concludes.
"It was Chávez. It was Chávez."
Some saw other Chávez-like traits emerging in Mr. Zelaya, including
megalomania. Like his Venezuelan mentor, Mr. Zelaya took often to the airwaves
commandeering all of the country's television channels for long speeches.
Mirroring Mr. Chávez's fascination with Venezuelan independence hero Simon
Bolivar, who tried to unite much of Latin America, Mr. Zelaya asked El
Salvador's president if he could borrow the remains of Central America's 19th
century hero, Gen. Francisco Morazán, who is buried in El Salvador, so he could
tour Central America with the bones to push regional integration.
Mr. Zelaya took much of his cabinet when he went scuba diving in a tourist
development, wearing his cowboy hat until the last moment before hitting the
water. Earlier this year, he skipped a meeting with donor countries to attend a
private concert of Mexico's Los Tigres del Norte, who serenaded Mr. Zelaya at
the presidential palace with one of their hits "Jefe de Jefes," or "Boss of
Bosses."
What really set Mr. Zelaya and most of the establishment on a collision
course was what many Hondurans saw as his bold drive to perpetuate himself in
power by rewriting the constitution to permit re-election -- which is forbidden
by Honduras's charter.
In the weeks before the referendum, the Supreme Court had ruled the vote
illegal for two reasons: First, only Honduras' election agency, not the
president, can call a referendum. Second, the article in Honduras' constitution
that bars re-election is unchangeable -- so much so that even attempting to
change it leads to automatic dismissal from public office.
When the military, following court rulings, refused to help distribute the
ballots days before the referendum, the president fired the military's chief of
staff, Gen. Romeo Vasquez, and accepted the resignations of the heads of the
army, navy and air force and the defense minister.
"I told the president we could not act against a court order. If we did so,
we would be committing a crime," says former defense minister Edmundo Orellana,
a close friend of Mr. Zelaya, who refused to go along with the president and
resigned over the issue.
Tensions spiked two days later when Mr. Zelaya, defying the courts, led a mob
to seize the disputed ballots at an Air Force base. "That was traumatic for the
armed forces," says Mr. Orellana, referring to the mob's forced entry. "At that
moment everyone said 'the man is crazy. We have to get him out."'
The Supreme Court responded by ordering Mr. Zelaya stripped of his office and
arrested. The military carried out the order, but feared his arrest would spark
violence. So the army sent Mr. Zelaya packing, breaking another constitutional
article that states a citizen can't be forcibly exiled and leading to an image
-- a president in his pajamas forced into exile at gunpoint -- that led nearly
everyone around the world to conclude the ouster qualified as a coup.
Mr. Orellana, who had resigned days earlier because he believed Mr. Zelaya
was breaking the law, also believes the soldiers' action in exiling Mr. Zelaya
constituted a coup. "It's the worse thing that could have happened," he says.
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