Juan and Pedro Enter the Honduras Oil Import Business, Coup d’Etat Follows

by Belén Fernández Thursday, Aug. 27, 2009 at 6:45 AM

"Padre Fausto later chronicled his own share of detentions, which included being kidnapped by paramilitaries in Honduras in 1981 on charges of inciting guerrilla activity based on his concern for campesino and indigenous rights. In captivity, Fausto was subjected to a schedule of sitting in rooms with torture instruments and being removed whenever someone needed to be tortured physically rather than psychologically. He subsequently spent a number of years in exile in Mexico; as for other Hondurans in exile, Fausto boasted that Zelaya had spoken with him and other Hondurans for four hours the previous day in Managua, neglecting a group of visiting European parliamentarians."

Juan and Pedro Enter the Honduras Oil Import Business, Coup d’Etat Follows

Padre Fausto Milla Returns to Santa Rosa de Copán from Nicaragua and Speaks of His Sunday Meeting with Exiled President Zelaya

By Belén Fernández

Special to The Narco News Bulletin

August 25, 2009

AUGUST 24, 2009, SANTA ROSA DE COPAN, HONDURAS: In the back room of a natural food and medicine shop in the western Honduran city of Santa Rosa de Copán on Monday afternoon, Al Giordano and I met with Catholic priest and shop owner Fausto Milla, who had just returned from a meeting in Managua, Nicaragua with ousted Honduran President Mel Zelaya. A spry 81 year old, Padre Fausto erupted into laughter at the news that Al had been jailed 27 times in the United States and slapped him on the arm.



Padre Fausto later chronicled his own share of detentions, which included being kidnapped by paramilitaries in Honduras in 1981 on charges of inciting guerrilla activity based on his concern for campesino and indigenous rights. In captivity, Fausto was subjected to a schedule of sitting in rooms with torture instruments and being removed whenever someone needed to be tortured physically rather than psychologically. He subsequently spent a number of years in exile in Mexico; as for other Hondurans in exile, Fausto boasted that Zelaya had spoken with him and other Hondurans for four hours the previous day in Managua, neglecting a group of visiting European parliamentarians.

According to the Padre, Zelaya told a story during the meeting about an incident that reportedly occurred in 2006, involving a longstanding deal with Texaco, Shell, and other fuel companies in which the Honduran government paid them an extra three cents for every dollar’s worth of gas imported. In Padre Fausto’s version, Zelaya had asked the companies if they intended to maintain a monopoly on fuel imports or if any old “Juan or Pedro” could import, as well. Texaco and Shell had denied having any problems with Juan and Pedro’s entrepreneurial endeavors.

Slapping his knee, Padre Fausto reenacted the emphatic interjection he made to Zelaya at that point in the exiled president’s story: “¡Allí comenzó el golpe!”—“That’s where the coup began!” He then expressed his desire to change the Honduran national anthem to “Nos tienen miedo porque no tenemos miedo,” an anti-coup song composed by presidential daughter Hortensia “Pichu” Zelaya meaning “they are scared of us because we are not scared of them.” The Padre tried out the anthem a few times with accompanying hand gestures.

While tracing the history of his own lack of fear, Padre Fausto described being taken into the mountains to sleep at night by his father, whose whereabouts required concealing based on the fact that he displayed greater solidarity with the indigenous population than that era’s dictatorship. The Padre lost his father at age four after the latter was forced into exile in El Salvador, but he still attributes his spirit of rebeldía to the mountain nights. Manifestations of said spirit have ranged from defiance of death threats and opposition to military massacres to defiance of Coca Cola and other non-organic materials.

As for potential outlets for the Padre’s proposed new national anthem, he noted that on Sunday night, during a live broadcast of a resistance concert in Tegucigalpa, Radio Globo was attacked with acid meant to melt its transmitter. The failure of the operation was confirmed when Al and I tuned into the station after our meeting with the Padre to find a live interview with Zelaya from Nicaragua, augmented by a new composition to the tune of Mexican ranchero star Vicente Fernández’ “Estos celos,” in which the refrain “ay, ay amor” is supplanted by “ay, Micheletti” in honor of the coup president.

Padre Fausto pronounced the coup resistance a novel social phenomenon in Honduras and likened the Honduran people to a tsunami that cannot be stopped. One effect of this similarity, according to Fausto, is that unless Zelaya is reinstated prior to the November elections a natural disaster will effectively befall the ballot boxes. The possibility of more proximate natural disasters meanwhile surfaced Tuesday afternoon with the announcement regarding potential US suspension of Honduran travel visas, generating panic among certain pro-coup sectors.

During our Monday meeting with the Padre, community resistance members dropped by to seek counsel and news from him. One such citizen was Héctor Arita, candidate of the Unificación Democrática political party for mayor of Santa Rosa de Copán, who explained that western Honduras was not typically known for its tsunami-like properties due to low standards of living. He noted, however, that the coup had proven a catalyst for political conscience and cited the July 31 blockade of the highway near a gas station in Santa Rosa, a town of almost 50,000 inhabitants near the Guatemalan border.

As for Juan and Pedro’s attempted fuel-related takeover, Padre Fausto continued his report on what had happened in Managua following his revelation as to the cause of the coup. According to Fausto, Zelaya had first asked his visitors to multiply three US cents by the amount of fuel not imported by Juan and Pedro, after which he asked them how much corn cost in Honduras and what the average annual familial corn budget was, which the visitors calculated as 6,000 Lempira (roughly 0 US dollars). Moving on to the next calculation requested by the president, Padre Fausto triumphantly raised his hands toward the sky in an indication of the amount of corn that could be distributed to the population if the government was not paying three extra cents per dollar for gasoline.



The possibility that Juan and Pedro were Venezuelan was not directly addressed in the discussion with Padre Fausto, although Zelaya’s reported style of educating the public by eliciting responses was not unlike methods used by Hugo Chávez on his television program Aló Presidente. Chávez’ aptitude for tsunami management was reinforced through the allocation of Venezuelan aid to Sri Lanka in 2005; Zelaya has meanwhile demonstrated a way to hold public consultations of Honduran citizens without being prosecuted for violating the constitution, which is to hold the consultations in Nicaragua.

Returning to the political orientation of the Honduran populace, Padre Fausto outlined the mentality of those citizens not located within the tsunami, who thought that the main tenet of socialism was that if you had three chickens and two of your neighbors had none, it was up to you to see that all three of you ended up with one chicken. Fausto had addressed in his homilies the issue of how such a situation would not be so bad, but had stressed that the division of poultry should ideally arise from a change in popular mentality and not be imposed from above.

Evidence of the incorporation of the Honduran middle class into the coup resistance was meanwhile found in nationwide vehicular caravans, which this past weekend had attracted a reported 200 vehicles in Santa Rosa. Fausto conceded that the new resistance tactic was probably not so much a sign of mental evolution as a sign of the fact that people with cars preferred to drive than to march across the country, a preference that would have presumably been cheaper had Juan and Pedro been fueling the caravans.



Share anti-coup materials widely and help defeat the scum. General Joe

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Toppling a Coup, Part VI: Electoral, Armed, or Something Else

Posted by Al Giordano - August 25, 2009 at 11:55 am

By Al Giordano

AUGUST 25, 2009, LA CEIBA, HONDURAS: Over the entrance to the three story building that is headquarters to the Organization for Ethnic and Community Development (ODECO, in its Spanish initials) are these words: “Buscamos voces que acallen el silencio.”

“We Seek Voices that Hush the Silence.”

For seventeen years, ODECO and the man the organization calls its principal strategist, Celeo Alvarez Casildo, have built what is evidently the largest and most advanced project of community organizing anywhere in (and one that reaches across a wide geographical swathe of) Honduras.

As Afro-Hondurans they have self-organized to defend and expand their civil rights and those of indigenous peoples and other minorities, to win proportional representation in Congress and other governmental bodies, to overturn NAFTA-style initiatives that would have opened the door wider to foreign ownership of Honduran property and resources and, among other conquests, to legalize 32,000 hectares of communal lands.

“We had always been invisible,” Alvarez, fifty-years-young, explained to your reporters. A recent reminder of the unapologetic racism rampant in the mindset of the Honduran oligarchy came in the early days after the June 28 coup d’etat when the regime’s make-believe foreign minister, Enrique Ortez, expressed his views about US President Barack Obama: “Ese negrito no sabe nada de Honduras,” or “That little nigger doesn’t know anything about Honduras.” Alvarez and ODECO launched an all-out media offensive that forced the regime’s first defeat: Ortez’s resignation (the regime transferred him to a less visible sinecure in its bureaucracy).

Friday will mark two months of the coup regime’s illegitimate grasp upon the Honduran state, and today a majority of Hondurans of all hues feel that same curse of invisibility imposed upon them. They have been told again and again by the pro-coup media and its mynah birds of the elites that they don’t exist, that “everybody” favors the coup, even when the only public polling data available demonstrates the opposite to be fact. The paltry 30 percent that, according to Gallup, have a favorable view of coup dictator Roberto Micheletti - when coup defenders talk about “everybody” as if the only Hondurans that count are those among the owning class or its aspirants - reveal with their exaggerated and fantastic claims that they, too, are much like Ortez: so blinded by racism and class prejudice that it renders them incapable of rational action, much less democratic governance.

As the US Aid agency – no friend of authentic democracy in Honduras, historically – has noted:

“With a per capita income of US0 per year, Honduras is one of the poorest countries in the region. Overall, 71.1 percent of Hondurans lives in poverty, and 77.7 percent of the rural population is poor. In urban areas, some 63.1 percent are poor. Income inequality is a critical issue. The richest 20 percent of households receive 54.3 percent of the total income of the country, while the poorest 20 percent receive only 3.2 percent. Of the country’s 7 million inhabitants, 41 percent are under age 14. Because the population is fairly young and economic conditions are harsh, a large number of marginalized youths struggle daily to subsist. Youths head 10 percent of Honduran households, and 68 percent of these households are below the poverty line.”

It is that lumpen majority that the elites never include when they make their wild claims about “what everybody thinks” in Honduras. And yet their fear of its democratic participation is so great that it provoked them to resort to a violent anti-democratic coup d'etat.

August 2009 in Honduras

In every corner of Honduras visited by Narco News in recent weeks – from the capital city of Tegucigalpa and its state of Francisco Morazan, through the states of Comayagua, Olancho, Colón, Atlantida, Yoro, Cortez and Copán (more than two thirds of Honduras’ population lives in those seven states) – we interviewed hundreds of voices, perhaps more than a thousand from every walk of life, most of whom told us the same thing: the primary goal for which they struggle is precisely that which provoked the power structure to impose a coup d’etat. They seek, above all other goals, a Constitutional Convention (known here as a Constituent Assembly, elected democratically) to rewrite the nation’s poorly-authored 1982 charter, a document which had enough holes in its flimsy and contradictory protections to allow a wealthy few to think they could ram an unconstitutional coup d’etat through it.

Elections in Honduras are conducted through “urnas,” or ballot boxes. The first urn is for paper ballots for president. The second is to select members of Congress. And the third is for municipal offices. It was the proposal for a “Cuarta Urna,” or fourth ballot box in the scheduled November 29 national election that caused panic among the ruling minority, because it would have - if approved by voters - convened such a Constitutional Convention.

Truth is, there are millions of Hondurans eligible to vote that simply do not. They don’t like the two-party system of the National and Liberal labels. They don’t generally trust the politicians from either of them. And the low voter turnout has allowed, time and time again, a minority of Hondurans to gain a plurality of votes for one or the other. What the oligarchy feared from a ballot question regarding a new constitution – even the nonbinding consultation that had been planned for June 28 – is that, yes they can, the great mass of normally nonparticipating Hondurans would flood the polls, creating a mandate for now-exiled President Manuel Zelaya to successfully push the national Congress to add the Cuarta Urna to the November ballot.

The consequence for those in power, if a plebiscite for a new Constitution were to share the November polling places with those for politicians, was evident to all: Historic voter turnout by sectors of the population that want to rebuild their nation along more authentically democratic lines. There was no question that a “yes” vote on the Cuarta Urna would have won overwhelmingly. Indeed, even in the case of the proposed June 28 nonbinding survey, the coup plotters felt they had to go to the extreme of kidnapping the president to put a stop to it in the hours before it was to happen.

The powerful forces that favor the status quo and offer abusive interpretation of its milquetoast Constitution of 1982 chose not to oppose the ballot question the democratic way – they didn’t organize a “vote no” campaign or anything like that – because they felt, indeed they knew, that it was a foregone conclusion that the people would overwhelmingly opt to convene a Constitutional Convention.

And for the bosses of the traditional parties – Liberal and National – the prospect for such radically increased voter turnout in November brought nightmares that the smaller but feisty Democratic Union Party (UD, in its Spanish initials), which promotes the Cuarta Urna, would become the overnight sensation – Obama style – as a flood of new voters washed the dead wood of the twin oligarch parties from the Congressional seas.

“One thing we never understood is how the Cuarta Urna, something so good, could become the pretext for a coup d’etat,” Celeo Alvarez told your reporters when we first visited him last week at the ODECO headquarters. “The coup was an abortion. It killed the most constructive and democratic hope available to the people.”

Meanwhile, the corporate media – and often too much of what bills itself as “alternative media,” too – has focused more obsessively on the circus up above: Will exiled President Mel Zelaya return to Honduras? If and when he does will he be imprisoned by the coup regime? How long will coup “president” Roberto Micheletti last in power? Will military General Romeo Vásquez Velásquez be scapegoated and prosecuted for the original sin of demonstrating the coup’s illegality by forcibly exiling the President to Costa Rica? Lost in all this mediatic star gazing is the central aspiration that remains down below where the people live and work: the Constituent Assembly and the new Constitution.

As political analyst Ricardo Arturo Salgado wrote last week:

“There are essentially two possible short-term scenarios for what may happen in the country: a) the president returns; and b) the president does not return to his post. No matter the scenario, the struggle will continue because the ultimate goal is the re-founding of our nation, not just the return of President Zelaya.”

Indeed, the two months that have already passed under coup dictatorship leave only five more possible months in Zelaya's tenure, even if he does return briefly to power (a scenario that looks increasingly unlikely), until the scheduled January 29, 2010 inauguration of a new president.

And although Zelaya himself has agreed to the twelve-point deal known as the Arias Plan – one in which he would return as president but with vastly reduced powers – this US-backed “solution,” because it fails to address the popular yearning for a new Constitution, leaves the more-organized-than-ever-before Honduran social movements without an attainable institutional path to accomplish their most coveted grail.

That’s why, increasingly, at the grassroots level, the people and their organizers express that they, too, quietly prefer that the coup regime of the gorilla Micheletti and his Simian Council continues to reject the Arias Plan. “I hope it doesn’t happen,” Padre Fausto Milla of Santa Rosa de Copán told us yesterday (see the related report by Belén Fernández, coming up next on Narco News). A consensus is emerging down below that the more direct paths to revert this abortion of a coup will become clearer once the nonsense cooked up above, via San José and Washington, will be recognized by all as fundamentally flawed since its conception. Plan Arias is already stillborn.

This upcoming Friday, August 28, is therefore cooking up to be a very powerfully symbolic day: the two-month milestone will mark the psychological end of all attempts to resolve the matter institutionally. The various human rights delegations - from the OAS, the Inter American Human Rights Commission and Spanish Judge Balthazar Garzón's international criminal court - are on their way out of town as we type, and the failure of international diplomacy as imposed by US Secretary of State Hillary Clinton will give way to the second stage of the struggle to remake the country more in the image of authentic Honduras and its dispossessed majority.

Three Paths: Electoral, Armed or Something Else

The social movements in Honduras find themselves in a dilemma with no ideal solution when it comes to the scheduled November 29 elections, devoid of any Cuarta Urna, and managed by a coup regime that has already demonstrated it cares not a whit for democratic process or such quaint concepts as the will of the people. Monsters that engage in coups d’etat won’t hesitate to utilize electoral fraud if they have to, and everybody knows it. No reasonable observer thinks that such “elections” can possibly be fair or free under a regime that establishes curfews, suspends basic constitutional liberties and pours acid on critical broadcast transmitters any time it feels the slightest bit threatened by nonviolent civil resistance from below.

If the Honduran social movements decide to participate in the November 29 simulation, they risk legitimizing a game that is already fixed against them. At the same time, because of the fracture in the Liberal Party between its golpistas and anti-golpistas, there would certainly be vast gains by the Democratic Union Party, gathering what the Liberals and their hapless standard bearer, former Vice President Elvin Santos, have spilled. And it would lead to a lot more of them in the national Congress, which is the body that can place a Cuarta Urna on the ballot, if not in 2009, then perhaps in 2010.

The opposition electoral forces are also plagued by tactical disagreements in their own ranks: While the UD Party nominated César Ham as its presidential candidate, another opposition personality, labor leader Carlos Reyes, is also on the ballot as the country’s first-ever Independent presidential candidate, one without a political party. UD leaders like Congresswoman Silvia Ayala tell Narco News that they’re suspicious that the country’s Electoral Tribunal put the Independent on the ballot – an unprecedented development in Honduran politics - to divide the opposition vote. Others, like labor movement veteran Pedro Brizuela in the San Pedro Sula region, express positive feelings about both Ham and Reyes but suggest that the somewhat older Reyes might be the stronger possible candidate to unite behind. And, finally, an important sector of the left simply will boycott any election called by the illegitimate coup regime, which makes victory virtually impossible even without the predicted electoral fraud due to suppressed voter turnout by an ambivalent population.

The eight nations that belong to ALBA, the Bolivarian Alliance of the Americas – Antigua and Barbuda, Bolivia, Cuba, the Dominican Republic, Ecuador, Nicaragua, Saint Vincent and the Grenadines, and Venezuela – have declared they will not recognize the winner of Honduran elections held under a coup regime, and its highly probable that neither will the Organization of American States (OAS).

And so the electoral path, if not fully closed, is littered with enough obstacles and landmines that those that haven’t disregarded it yet will likely come to that conclusion a day late and a dollar short, on November 30 of this year, once its tragedy is fully realized.

Upon collapse of the idea that fixed elections hold a path out of the coup, talk in some corners turns to armed struggle: of mounting a guerrilla war. There are always those of limited imagination who see only two paths possible: electoral or armed. Yet the most basic rule of guerrilla combat is one has to measure the “correlation of forces” before marching out on that highly exposed limb.

That correlation, if objectively analyzed, does not at present contain the successful ingredients that would be necessary to overturn the coup through the barrel of a gun. Unlike neighboring Nicaragua, El Salvador and Guatemala – where well organized guerrilla movements have both won and lost against entrenched oligarchies and coups d’etat – Honduras has little experience in a field that, over recent decades, technology has made even more difficult. Unlike in the 1970s, when the Sandinistas in Nicaragua toppled the Somoza regime and when the FMLN in El Salvador came extremely close to doing the same for its nation, today there are telecommunications satellites orbiting above the earth that make clandestine insurgency, even in jungle terrain, virtually impossible. Ubiquitous cell phones, the Internet and the surveillance they bring with them over their own users add to the impediments.

Advocates for the armed path – they tend to speak in whispers, and certainly have not yet organized wide support for that scenario – accurately point out that there are tens if not hundreds of thousands of Hondurans at present so committed to winning back their country that an armed resistance could conceivably outnumber and even overpower the 9,000 members of the Honduran Armed Forces and the 14,000 National Police, perhaps, maybe if everything went right. True, but that measurement of the correlation of forces omits another powerful sector: that of organized crime.

That narco-traffickers and other crime organizations are heavily armed in Central America is no secret. In the upper echelons of this milieu are the international crime syndicates, including the ex-Cuban supporters of terrorists like Luis Posada Carriles as well as Mexican and Colombian traffickers displaced by the preference by governments in those lands for competing crime organizations. Honduras, under a coup regime that is now cut off from much legal international aid, has put up the “welcome” sign to these bandits in search of a new flag to provide them with safe haven for their activities along the cocaine route between Colombia and the United States in exchange for the vast resources they bring.

And then there are the retail level narcos. As the above-mentioned US AID report notes, “According to police statistics, at the end of 2003, there were 36,000 gang members in Honduras.” Whether that estimate is exaggerated or undercounted its number has surely grown since then, and these must also be measured in the correlation of forces. Confronted with a guerrilla insurgency, the coup regime and its police agencies would have it in their power to bring these notoriously brutal armed sectors of organized crime into the counter-insurgency, and to do so literally overnight. Simply with a promise of impunity for their commerce in contraband, the coup regime can enlist the full weight of such armed organizations, networks and gangs to bring a wave of terror not just against any armed insurgency, but also against all social players that remain peacefully in resistance, and - coup defenders should be careful what they wish for - the vast law abiding civilian population, including middle and upper class coup supporters, expats and tourists, too. The demons would be unleashed upon the entire population, not just those from one political camp.

An honest assessment of the correlation of forces has to conclude that, at present, both the electoral and armed paths that have changed history in other lands are closed, or about to shut, in Honduras.

Which brings us back to the slogan over that building in La Ceiba, Honduras’ third-largest city, that invites: “We Seek Voices that Hush the Silence.”

What Is “Something Else?”

The capital city of Tegucigalpa is the first place that foreign media, human rights observers and solidarity missions go when they visit Honduras, and that is understandable. It is the seat of state power, whether in times of legitimacy or in this hour of illegitimacy. It is also the central headquarters of the national unions and other organizations that have come together in civil resistance.

Yet few international media or observers have taken the time and attention to head beyond Tegucigalpa and out into the provinces to study the dynamics on the ground in the rest of the country. The conditions are not the same as they are in the capital. They are, in fact, better. The civil resistance at the local level in the rest of the country is generally not as tied up in the emergencies du jour that the cycle of marches, repression, more marches, more repression, and the media circus around both, that have characterized much of the resistance in the capital city.

Out in the field, there is simply more air and room to think, to observe calmly, to have lengthier conversations and listening sessions, to ignore the daily scandals and distractions put forward by the dishonest national and international media, and whether along the northern coast, the Olancho breadbasket or the Mayan mountain regions to the west, the outlying grassroots focal points of the resistance are characterized by more mid-to-long-term thinking about strategy and tactics than can occur under the state of siege situation in Tegucigalpa and its constant crises and interruptions. Set and setting will always influence how humans think and act, and among the more than 80 percent of the Honduran population that lives outside the capital’s metropolitan area the current set and setting are simply less bipolar.

“Here, we struggle to become the subjects of our own story and not mere objects of it,” Celeo Alvarez explains while providing a tour of the three-story building that ODECO inaugurated two years ago in La Ceiba as its new central command. Long term planning is the watchword here, where ODECO prepares one hundred and more youths each year, selected at the grassroots level by community organizations, through its Leadership Training Program in Human Rights. The headquarters includes dormitories with 64 beds, kitchen, assembly hall and other resources. It was constructed with funds from Nongovernmental Organizations, mainly from Europe, that support ODECO’s work.

Celeo Alvarez Casildo and his collaborators have some ideas for how Hondurans can replant their struggle and put it back on the path to a new Constitution. We’ve spent various days listening carefully to them, prodding, poking and testing them with questions and antitheses, as well as studying what he and his organization have already accomplished, and how they did so. Those ideas, and the stories behind them, will be the subject of the next chapter of this series on Toppling a Coup. Meanwhile, we invite our readers to think aloud about what “something else” might look and be like in this country of more than seven million Hondurans, where a majority now feel the weight of an imposed silence that they know, too, must be hushed.

Update: Perhaps because it, too, feels its Plan Arias "solution" slipping away, the US State Department today announced that beginning tomorrow, Wednesday, August 26, it is suspending the process for all travel visas not classified as "emergency" for Hondurans that wish to visit the United States. It is a move designed to put maximum pressure on the coup regime to go along with Plan Arias, since it affects the regime's political base: the oligarch class that can afford to travel to the Miami, Disney World, and such. The coming days will tell whether this last-gasp effort comes too little, too late to save the botched diplomacy efforts from Washington. (Here's the statement, in English, from State.)

Update II: Radio Globo reporter Eduardo Maldonado is reporting, live, his eye-witness account of members of the Honduran military brass and the top chiefs of the National Police who recently arrived a building near Morazan Boulevard in Tegucigalpa and are meeting inside "on the third floor." The radio is also reporting that the Catholic Church hierarchy and various Chambers of Commerce have determined to back the San José solution of reinstating Zelaya to the presidency "regardless of the stance of the Micheletti government." Looks like the visa suspension is peeling away some inner layers of the coup onion rather rapidly. Something's up. And we're here monitoring the situation. Developing...

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This hemispheric awakening is being fostered by independent media artists/sources who you can easily follow. Some are:

www.narconews.com

www.telesurtv.net/noticias/canal/senalenvivo.php

www.venezuelanalysis.com/

http://chiapas.indymedia.org/ Spanish

Join this struggle for justice and true freedom. Our brothers and sisters across the Americas are doing their parts from conditions of extreme hardship and danger. Surely it is time for us to “step up” from here. We may be on the verge of an historic victory. Spread the news everywhere. jamie





Original: Juan and Pedro Enter the Honduras Oil Import Business, Coup d’Etat Follows