Clinton Sends Officials to Honduras to End Crisis
By Stephen Kaufman
Staff Writer
Washington -
Secretary of State Hillary Rodham Clinton is sending three
U.S. officials to Honduras for talks with ousted President
Manuel Zelaya and the interim head of the de facto Honduran
government, Roberto Micheletti, to reflect the urgency in
finding a resolution to the country's political crisis
before elections scheduled for November.
State
Department spokesman Ian Kelly said October 27 that the U.S.
delegation, consisting of Assistant Secretary of State for
Western Hemisphere Affairs Thomas Shannon, Principal Deputy
Assistant Secretary for Western Hemisphere Affairs Craig
Kelly, and White House Special Assistant to the President
and Senior Director for Western Hemisphere Affairs Dan
Restrepo, is expected to leave Washington for Honduras as
soon as October 28.
The U.S. officials will discuss
strategies to move forward on an accord crafted by Costa
Rican President Oscar Arias on behalf of the Organization of
American States (OAS) to end Honduras' political stalemate.
Zelaya was ousted in a June 28 coup and replaced by the de
facto government. (See "United States Calls for Restoration
of Honduran Civil Liberties ( http://www.america.gov/st/peacesec-english/2009/September/20090929145743dmslahrellek0.3372766.html
).
The officials "will urge both sides to show
flexibility and redouble their efforts to bring the crisis
to an end," Kelly said.
The Obama administration
continues to support efforts by the OAS to broker a
solution. Kelly said Clinton's decision to send the U.S.
delegation came after talks between Zelaya and the de facto
government broke down October 23.
"It was at that
point that the secretary decided to get involved directly
and called both Mr. Micheletti and President Zelaya," Kelly
said. She decided October 26 that the time was right to send
a delegation and have U.S. officials "more directly involved
in the process."
The Honduran presidential election is
scheduled for November 29, and "this is precisely why we see
some urgency in this," he said.
The United States
wants an election "to enjoy the kind of international
legitimacy that the people of Honduras deserve for their
government," Kelly said.
"In order for it to be seen
as legitimate and for the authorities down there to conduct
a completely open and transparent electoral process ...
there needs to be some time."
A senior State
Department official speaking on background said "the clock
is ticking" on finding a solution to the political crisis
that would not jeopardize the legitimacy of the coming
election.
"We've really only got, I think, this week
to try and resolve this," the official said. "If we can't
get Zelaya returned to power, then we've got to figure how
do we support the people of Honduras? They need to have a
legitimate government and that's what I think is driving a
lot of the urgency."
The official added that the two
sides are still talking and making progress. "They were
actually pretty close last night."
The outstanding
differences come down to "really only one sentence. It's all
about Zelaya's return," the official said.
In his
remarks to reporters, spokesman Kelly also expressed
condolences on behalf of the United States to Micheletti and
his family over the death of his nephew, Enzo Micheletti,
who reportedly was murdered over the weekend of October
24.
"As of now, we have no information about the
motive of this violent act," Kelly
said.
ENDS