Posted on Wednesday, 07.15.09
WALL STREET JOURNAL
Why Honduras Sent Zelaya Away
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Honduras' Zelaya not alone on the border
Since former Honduran President Manuel Zelaya arrived at the Nicaragua-Honduras border on Friday to taunt the de facto government that exiled him a month ago, hundreds of Hondurans have answered his call to join him just across the border in Nicaragua.
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Central American migrants face more hurdles
Many Hondurans and others traveling north toward the United States through Mexico go missing or die in the long, perilous journey. Now they are also easy targets for kidnap by criminal gangs.
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In deeply split Honduras, a potentially combustible situation
To many poor Hondurans, deposed president Manuel "Mel" Zelaya was a trailblazing ally who scrapped school tuitions, raised the minimum wage and took on big business.
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``Over a Barrel: The Truth About Oil'' with ABC News' Charles Gibson, referred to in TV Week and in Wednesday's 5-Minute Herald, was postponed because of the president's Wednesday night news conference. The program will air on 20/20 at 10 p.m. Friday on WPLG-ABC 10.
A Page 1A story in Wednesday's paper from the Nicaraguan-Honduran border misspelled the name of the Honduran town of Danlí.
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Ally's ouster gives Venezuela's Hugo Chávez a stage
The ouster of Honduran President Manuel Zelaya could not have been better scripted for another Latin American leader who has taken center stage: Venezuelan President Hugo Chávez. The populist firebrand has been Zelaya's most forceful advocate and could win international accolades if the Honduran eventually succeeds in regaining power.
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WALL STREET JOURNAL
In a perfect world former Honduran President Manuel Zelaya would be in jail in his own country right now, awaiting trial. The Honduran attorney general has charged him with deliberately violating Honduran law and the Supreme Court ordered his arrest in Tegucigalpa on June 28.
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