Honduras dialogue has timid start
By Patrick Markey and Ana Isabel Martinez
SAN JOSE, Costa Rica (Reuters) - The two rivals for power in Honduras started a dialogue through a mediator on Thursday, but there was no face-to-face meeting or breakthrough to solve the political crisis sparked by last month's coup.
Ousted Honduran President Manuel Zelaya, and the man who replaced him after the June 28 coup, Roberto Micheletti, left behind teams in Costa Rica's capital San Jose, holding talks under the mediation of Costa Rican President Oscar Arias.
Zelaya maintained his demand, which he said was widely backed by the international community, to be reinstated as head of state of Honduras, a small coffee and textile exporting nation which is among the poorest in the Americas.
But Micheletti, who argues Zelaya was lawfully ousted last month because he violated Honduras' constitution by trying to lift presidential term limits, ruled this out.
"The topic not for discussion is the return of ex-President Zelaya, unless he hands himself over to justice," Micheletti, who was appointed by Honduras' Congress after the coup, said after returning to his country from Costa Rica.
Arias, a Nobel Peace Prize winner, said in San Jose he was pleased a dialogue had started, but he stressed the key issue of debate and contention was Zelaya's restoration.
"Dialogue can produce miracles but not immediate ones and this could possibly take much longer than one might imagine," he said. Arias won the 1987 Nobel Peace Prize for helping to solve conflicts in Central America.
Both Zelaya and Micheletti met separately with Arias in the Costa Rican capital, but they did not sit down for direct discussions. "There was no face-to-face meeting," said Costa Rican presidential spokesman Pablo Gueren. Continued...
