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News Source: China News
| 4 months ago
Zelaya said Monday he would visit Washington on Wednesday before returning to his country, following the coup that ousted him, and the White House and State Department expected him to meet State Department officials. State Department spokesman Ian...
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News Source: BBC
| 4 months ago
US President Barack Obama has called the removal of Honduran president Manuel Zelaya on Sunday a "coup". The ousted leader has been meeting US officials in Washington. But the US State Department has not recalled its ambassador from Tegucigalpa and...
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News Source: Al Jazeera
| 4 months ago
We have just been to a very large demonstration by people who do support this move by the Honduran congress, courts and the army," Mariana Sanchez, Al Jazeera's correspondent in Tegucigalpa, the Honduran capital, reported. "I just spoke to...
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News Source: Androscoggin News
| 4 months ago
Secretary Clinton said the situation in Honduras " has evolved into a coup ," but said the U.S. government was "withholding any formal legal determination."...It's a tricky situation for Clinton (seen above in Honduras on June 2). If the United...
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News Source: The Nation
| 4 months ago
Yesterday President Obama declared the coup was "not legal" and affirmed the Zelaya government's legitimacy, statements that were considered "very good" by Venezuelan diplomats interviewed by The Nation ...In the background are memories of US...
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News Source: Voice of America
| 4 months ago
Ousted Honduran President Manuel Zelaya says he will return to his country later this week. Mr. Zelaya announced the plans late Monday during a meeting of Latin American leaders in Nicaragua. The Honduran president says he plans to make the trip...
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News Source: The Guardian
| 4 months ago
Early on Sunday morning, troops stormed the presidential palace of Honduras and kidnapped the president. Immediately eyes turned to the United States, which for more than a century has backed friendly dictators and cooked-up coups in Central America.
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News Source: USA Today
| 4 months ago
President Obama on Monday declared that the United States still considers Manuel Zelaya to be the president of Honduras and assailed the coup that forced him into exile as "not legal," widening the chasm between the Central American nation and much...
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News Source: NewKerala
| 4 months ago
Speaking to reporters alongside visiting Colombian President Alvaro Uribe, Obama repeated his condemnation of Sunday's events in Honduras, where the army ousted President Mel Zelaya and forced him into exile in Costa Rica. "It would be a terrible...
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News Source: Los Angeles Times
| 4 months ago
Obama administration officials seek a political solution and make no threats of sanctions. June 30, 2009 President Obama expressed "great concerns" about the strife, and U.S. officials planned on attending a session of the Organization of American...