Ousted president back in Honduras

Zelaya still faces threat of arrest

— Ousted President Manuel Zelaya returned home to Honduras on Monday, three months after he was forced into exile at gunpoint.

Seeking safety at the Brazilian Embassy, Zelaya called on his countrymen to come to the capital for peaceful protest.

"It is the moment of reconciliation," he said Monday during a televised speech that featured Zelaya's voice but not his image.

His surprise arrival, despite threats of arrest, sparked demonstrations in the streets outside the embassy as supporters, who have protested for months since his ouster, cheered his return.

"We are all happy because he is the constitutional president of Honduras," teacher Alfredo Rodriguez Escobar told The Associated Press. Overhead a police helicopter hovered over the growing crowd.

The return sharply and suddenly escalates the country's political crisis - challenging the government installed by the coup to make good on its promise to arrest Zelaya and making him a polarizing figure for demonstrations - for and against - in the country's capital.

The country's Congress and Supreme Court, alarmed by Zelaya's political shift into a close alliance with Venezuelan President Hugo Chavez, backed Zelaya's removal, arguing that he violated the constitution.

U.S. State Department spokesman Ian Kelly confirmed Monday that Zelaya had returned to Honduras.

The U.S. calls on all sides to "refrain from activities that could provoke violence," Kelly told reporters at a briefing.

"Of course, we believe that [Zelaya is] the democratically elected and constitutional leader of Honduras," he said.

Crowds gathered outside the United Nations compound early Monday after Zelaya initially went on television saying he had arrived there, apparently trying to mislead local officials. He later appeared at the Brazilian Embassy.

Zelaya said he had "evaded a thousand obstacles" to return.

And his staunch supporter, Chavez, described the journey: "President Manuel Zelaya, along with four companions, traveled for two days overland, crossing mountains and rivers, risking their lives. They have made it to Honduras."

Interim President Roberto Micheletti, who assumed power after Zelaya's overthrow, said Zelaya is still in a hotel room in Nicaragua and the announced return amounted to "media propaganda, terrorism."

The acting president has maintained that Zelaya violated the constitution by plotting to extend his term, and has said that the deposed president would be arrested if he returned.

"The idea is to provoke," Micheletti said on Venezuela's Globovision network.

Zelaya was forced out of the country at gunpoint on June 28.

Most international leaders - including the United States and the Organization of American States - say they still recognize Zelaya as president and demand that he be reinstated.

Micheletti has said he will step aside after presidential elections are held as scheduled in November.

If the interim administration attempts to imprison Zelaya, protesters who have demonstrated against his ouster could turn violent, said Vicki Gass at the Washington Office on Latin America, a nongovernmental organization.

"There's a saying about Honduras that people can argue in the morning and have dinner in the evening, but I'm not sure this will happen in this case," said Gass.

"It's been 86 days since the coup. Something had to break, and this might be it," she added.

But Juan Carlos Hidalgo, project coordinator for Latin America at the libertarian Cato Institute, said Zelaya should expect to be jailed.

"If he is back, his options are quite limited because the moment that his location is discovered or that he publicly comes out of the trees where he's hiding, he's going to be arrested for sure," he said.

Information for this article was contributed by Freddy Cuevas, Catherine E. Shoichet, Martha Mendoza, Alexandra Olson and Fabiola Sanchez of The Associated Press and by Matthew Walter, Daniel Cancel, Andres R. Martinez and Indira Lakshmanan of Bloomberg News.

Front Section, Pages 5 on 09/22/2009

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