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08/01/2009

News / United States Revokes Visas of Four Honduran Diplomats

By Merle David Kellerhals Jr.
Staff Writer

Washington — The United States revoked the diplomatic visas of four diplomats working in the Honduran Embassy in Washington, State Department spokesman Ian Kelly said.

The revocations were made after a review of Honduran Embassy officials who were serving under the government of ousted President Manuel Zelaya before he was deposed June 28, but now work for the “de facto regime” of interim President Roberto Micheletti, Kelly said July 28 at the daily State Department news briefing. Four visas have been revoked and others are under review, he said.

“We don’t recognize Roberto Micheletti as the president of Honduras,” Kelly said. “We recognize Manuel Zelaya. And so in keeping with that policy of nonrecognition, we have decided to revoke official diplomatic visas, or ‘A’ visas, of four individuals who are members of [Micheletti’s] regime.”

The diplomats are not currently in the United States and Kelly would not identify them. The diplomatic visas were revoked at the U.S. Embassy in Tegucigalpa, he said.

Kelly said the United States is trying to support the mediation efforts of Costa Rican President Oscar Arias to resolve the standoff between Zelaya and the regime that gained control over the country when Zelaya was arrested by the Honduran military on June 28 and flown to Costa Rica. Since then, the United States has encouraged both sides to negotiate a resolution to the constitutional crisis.

Kelly said the United States is reviewing all bilateral programs with Honduras.

“We’re very focused on supporting President Arias,” he said.

While traveling in India recently, Secretary of State Hillary Rodham Clinton spoke with leaders in Honduras, urging them to continue negotiations being mediated by Arias and to find a peaceful resolution to the crisis, State Department spokesman Philip Crowley said. Clinton made clear, “if the de facto regime needed to be reminded, that we seek a restoration of democratic and constitutional order, a peaceful resolution,” Crowley said July 20.

No government has recognized the regime led by Micheletti. The United Nations and the Organization of American States have called for Zelaya’s return. On July 20, the European Union suspended 65.5 million euros ($92.8 million) in aid to Honduras, according to the EU.
http://www.america.gov/st/peacesec-english/2009/July/20090728155533dmslahrellek0.886059.html?CP.rss=true

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