viernes, 7 de agosto de 2009

The backers of the Honduran coup have an inside man in Washington

From: andres thomas

Mañana en Democracy Now! va a haber un debate con Lanny Davis, del
lobby pro- golpista, con alguien que defiende el orden constitucional y el
retorno de Manuel Zelaya. Debate en vivo a las 6am hora de Honduras
en: www.democracynow.org

Artículo sobre Lanny Davis...
http://www.prospect.org//cs/articles;jsessionid=akchQziyNGWdub8CWl?arti
cle=our_man_in_honduras

Our Man in Honduras
The backers of the Honduran coup have an inside man in Washington
July 22, 2009

Roberto Lovato

"If you want to understand who the real power behind the [Honduran] coup
is," says Robert White, president of the Washington-based Center for
International Policy, during a recent interview, "you need to find out who's
paying Lanny Davis."
Davis, an ally of the Clinton family who is best known as the lawyer who
defended Bill during the presidential impeachment proceedings, was
recently on Capitol Hill lobbying members of Congress and testifying
against exiled President Manuel Zelaya before the House Foreign
Relations Committee. White, who previously served as the United States
ambassador to El Salvador, thought that such information about Davis'
clients would be "very difficult to find."

But the answer proved easy to find. Davis, a partner at the law firm Orrick,
Herrington, & Sutcliffe, openly named them -- and his clients are the same
powerful Hondurans behind the military coup.

"My clients represent the CEAL, the [Honduras Chapter of] Business
Council of Latin America," Davis saidwhen reached at his office last
Thursday. "I do not represent the government and do not talk to President
[Roberto] Micheletti. My main contacts are Camilo Atala and Jorge
Canahuati. I'm proud to represent businessmen who are committed to the
rule of law." Atala, Canahuati, and other families that own the corporate
interests represented by Davis and the CEAL are at the top of an economic
pyramid in which 62 percent of the population lives in poverty, according to
the World Bank.

For many Hondurans and Honduras watchers, the confirmation that Davis
is working with powerful, old Honduran families like the Atalas and
Canahuatis is telling: To them, it proves that Davis serves the powerful
business interests that ran, repressed, and ruined Honduras during the
decades prior to the leftward turn of the Zelaya presidency.

"No coup just happens because some politicians and military men decide
one day to simply take over," White says upon hearing for whom Davis is
working. "Coups happen because very wealthy people want them and help
to make them happen, people who are used to seeing the country as a
money machine and suddenly see social legislation on behalf of the poor
as a threat to their interests. The average wage of a worker in free trade
zones is 77 cents per hour."

"The tragedy," adds White, "is that the Canahuatis and the Atalas and the
other big businesspeople don't understand that it's in their best interest to
help to do things like help people make a decent living, reduce
unemployment, and raise the minimum wage."

Davis disagrees. He believes that the tragedy of Honduras lies with Zelaya
and that the president brought the coup upon himself. "It is an undisputed
fact that Mr. Zelaya has violated the constitution. It's my job to get the facts
out."

Asked if he had qualms about representing businesspeople linked to a coup
government denounced and unrecognized by the United Nations, the
Organization of American States, and many countries across the globe
(including the United States), Davis responded, "There are facts about Mr.
Zelaya that the world community may not be aware of. I'm proud to
represent clients who support the decision of Secretary of State [Hillary]
Clinton to back the mediation of President Arias in the conflict [between
Zelaya and coup leaders]. But my biggest concern is safety and security of
the Honduran people."

Davis is not the only one concerned about the safety and security the
Honduran people. The Committee of Families of Disappeared-Detainees in
Honduras (COFADEH), a nongovernmental human-rights organization,
released a report last week documenting over 1,100 human-rights
violations -- arbitrary detentions, physical assaults, murders, and attacks on
the media by the government and affiliated clandestine forces -- that have
occurred since the coup began on June 28.

COFADEH has also placed responsibility for the coup and the terror it has
wrought directly on many of the founders of the Alliance for Progress and
Development of Honduras (APROH), a predecessor of CEAL. Though now
defunct, APROH brought together some of the same business and military
interests that compose the political and economic hub of Honduras' radical
right, including the Canahuatis, Atalas, and other CEAL families and
businesses represented by Davis.

The CEAL predecessor's track record on human rights has been less than
stellar. In 1983, Honduras' El Tiempo newspaper leaked an internal
APROH document that recommended a military solution to problems in
Honduras -- and the rest of Central America -- to Ronald Reagan's
Kissinger Commission, a bipartisan committee charged with formulating
U.S. policy in the region. Perhaps more damning, APROH is considered by
COFADEH and other human-rights organizations as the eminence grise
behind the death squad killings conducted by the infamous "Batallion 316"
in the 1980s.

Upon hearing Davis' statements, Jose Luis Galdamez, a journalist for
Radio Globo, laughs. "Mr. Davis is either ignorant of Honduras or is
knowingly bloodying his name and that of the Clintons for lots of money,"
he says. Galdamez recently went into hiding after members of the armed
forces and paramilitary organizations harassed him and his colleagues. The
military raided his radio station, beat workers there, and threatened them
for working at one of the few independent media outlets willing to "report
about what's actually happening in Honduras," Galdamez says.

"I wish Mr. Davis would come here where I'm hiding so I can show him what
it's like to feel threatened not just by [de facto Honduran President]
Micheletti and the military, but by the Canahautis and other groups of
power he represents," Galdamez says.

Galdamez, Gilda Rivera of the Center for Women's Rights, and others
interviewed for this story fear that, in hiring Clinton ally Davis, Canahuati,
Atala, and CEAL are using the liberal sheen of the Democratic Party to
divert attention from the dark history behind the current Honduran coup.

"The rich simply send you out to kill you and then kill with impunity. They
never investigate into who killed who because the groups in power control
the media, control the judiciary, and now control the government again,"
Galdamez says. "Mr. Davis is trying to legitimize people who use
psychological intimidation and violence. He's representing the interests of
state terror."

In a recent statement denouncing the coup, COFADEH described its
backers as "the same group that in the 1980s was known as Alliance for
Progress and Development of Honduras, which maintains its terror thru
death squads." The COFADEH report documents four cases of extra-
judicial killings, including the July 5 shooting of 19- year-old Isis Obed
Murillo, captured in a graphic video subsequently posted on YouTube.

Asked about human-rights violations by the Micheletti government, Davis
again places the onus for the current crisis on Zelaya. "I researched the
facts on what occurred during the presidency of Mr. Zelaya. Mr. Zelaya led
mob violence, and you can see that on a YouTube video."

When pressed about the grisly footage of the shooting of Murillo, Davis
responded, "Is there a video of the shooters? We need to know the facts."
He added, "If you can show me facts proving that my clients are involved in
violations of civil liberties, I'll resign."

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