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Zelaya returns to Honduras border | Zelaya returns to Honduras border |
(about 6 hours later) | |
Ousted Honduran President Manuel Zelaya has returned to the country's border with Nicaragua for the second day running, demanding to be allowed home. | |
He says he will set up camp on the Nicaraguan side to keep up pressure on the interim Honduran government. | He says he will set up camp on the Nicaraguan side to keep up pressure on the interim Honduran government. |
Speaking into a megaphone, he demanded to be allowed to see his family, who he has not seen since last month's coup. | |
On Friday, he made a symbolic crossing over the border into Honduras but withdrew minutes later. | |
The US, which opposed Mr Zelaya's dismissal and expulsion last month, has described his current attempts to return home as "reckless". | The US, which opposed Mr Zelaya's dismissal and expulsion last month, has described his current attempts to return home as "reckless". |
Interim Honduran President Roberto Micheletti dismissed Friday's brief return as a publicity stunt, saying Mr Zelaya's action was "ill-conceived and silly". | |
The country's interior minister said that if the ousted president had dared go any further, he would have been arrested. | |
Meanwhile, the Honduran armed forces have indicated they would not oppose a deal to restore Mr Zelaya to the presidency with limited powers, the New York Times reports. | |
Curfew | |
During Saturday's return to the frontier, the cowboy-hatted exiled president vowed to wait near the border. | During Saturday's return to the frontier, the cowboy-hatted exiled president vowed to wait near the border. |
Zelaya road show reaches border | |
"Today we are going to set up camps here, with water and food. We are going to stay here this afternoon, tonight and tomorrow morning," he told a crowd of 150 supporters. | "Today we are going to set up camps here, with water and food. We are going to stay here this afternoon, tonight and tomorrow morning," he told a crowd of 150 supporters. |
But he said he would not attempt another crossing for fear of soldiers attacking his supporters, the Associated Press news agency reports. | |
US Secretary of State Hillary Clinton criticised Mr Zelaya's action, calling it "reckless" and "not conducive to the broader effort to restore constitutional order". | |
Much of southern Honduras has been paralysed by the crisis, the BBC's Stephen Gibbs says from Honduras. | Much of southern Honduras has been paralysed by the crisis, the BBC's Stephen Gibbs says from Honduras. |
A curfew remains in place day and night. Supporters of Mr Zelaya, describing themselves as a resistance movement, have blocked main roads, our correspondent says. | |
Anti-Zelaya supporters protested about his planned return | |
Dozens of trucks have been parked for several days in the approaches to the border, unable to make the crossing. | Dozens of trucks have been parked for several days in the approaches to the border, unable to make the crossing. |
And there is no sign as to when, or how, this will all end, our correspondent adds. | And there is no sign as to when, or how, this will all end, our correspondent adds. |
Mr Zelaya has been in exile since 28 June when a coup forced him from power. | |
The government which replaced him says he was attempting to stay in power indefinitely. | |
He insists he remains the democratically-elected leader of Honduras. | |
The talks in Costa Rica aimed at resolving the political crisis broke up last week with no agreement between the two sides. | |