Brazil Pans US and Clinton’s Role in Honduras Coup d’í‰tat Crisis

State secretary Hillary Clinton
The Foreign Minister of Brazil, Celso Amorim called last weekend US Secretary of State Hillary Clinton, who was in New Delhi, India, to "express concern" about the slow pace and handling of the negotiations for the reinstatement of the democratic order in Honduras, reports Brazilian daily Folha de S. Paulo.

According to the Brazilian Minister's press office, Amorim conveyed Brazil's criticism to Hillary regarding the way in which the mediation "on equal footing" was being carried out between the coup and deposed governments, under the leadership of Costa Rican President and Nobel Peace Prize winner Oscar Arias.

The Minister informed the Secretary of State – who sponsored the mediation by Arias – that Brazil did not approve of the possibility that the coup organizers could impose conditions for the return of President Zelaya, much less that of a coalition government of the two sides.

If such an agreement were sealed, according to the Brazilians' assessment, it will be characterized as a victory for the coup organizers, which would serve as an incentive for new coups in Latin America.

Even in the official version, the Brazilian Minister informed the United States that the mediation by the President of Costa Rica "has to be held within the framework of the OAS (Organization of American States) resolutions." In other words: with the unconditional return of the deposed Honduran leader to the presidency.

With the phone call, Brazil, which had kept a discreet attitude in this matter until now, especially to avoid creating tensions with the government of Barack Obama, joins the criticisms by countries in the region that are more to the left, led by Hugo Chávez.

The Venezuelan President and his allies criticize the Costa Rican negotiations as a strategy for the interim government of Roberto Micheletti to buy time and weaken the external and internal opposition.

Amorim also spoke of the "obvious" importance of the United States for a solution to the Honduran crisis. Washington is Honduras's main economic partner, which is part of CAFTA, the U.S.-Central America Free Trade Agreement.

Brazil sponsored part of the OAS resolution that calls on its member countries to review their relations with Honduras while the coup organizers remain in power. Various countries froze cooperation programs and recalled their ambassadors.

The United States only froze 16.5 million of 180 million US dollars in aid, arguing humanitarian reasons as well as the need to use the money as leverage in the negotiations. Washington also has not recalled its ambassador.

Mercopress

Tags:

You May Also Like

Brazil Puts Its Goods on Show to Arabs

The economic potential of Brazil will be shown by different ministries and government institutions ...

Brazilian Congress Creates Committee to Deal with Indian Issues

During a joint session held last week, Brazil’s National Congress approved the creation of ...

Mariza, Who Gave Fado New Lease on Life, Tours the US

Fans of the exceptionally beautiful and melancholy sounds of the Portuguese song form fado ...

Brazil Steps Up Campaign to Make Sayad IADB’s Chief

The Brazilian government persists in its campaign to get the economist, João Sayad, elected ...

No Reason to Fear Brazil’s Growth, Says Rice

U.S. Secretary of State Condoleezza Rice began a four-country tour of Latin America April ...

Brazilian President Tells at UN Brazil Is Ready to Help the US and Europe

Brazilian president Dilma Rousseff, on addressing UN’s 66th Assembly General, in New York, said ...

Brazil Sets New Record in Oil Production, 50,000 Barrels Above Daily Demand

As Brazilian state-owned oil company Petrobras moves ever closer to its goal of petroleum ...

Anorexic Model Death Leads Brazil to Crack Down on Thinness

In a quick response to the death from anorexia of Brazilian model Ana Carolina ...

After a 10-Year Silence, a Brazilian Chancellor Goes to Israel

The Brazilian Minister of Foreign Relations, Celso Amorim, is in Israel. This is the ...

Brazil’s Fingerprinting: Good to Catch Sex Tourists

Many U.S. citizens visit foreign lands to engage in illegal activity that would be ...