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Honduran army blocks runway to keep Zelaya out

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Honduran President Manuel Zelaya, ousted a week ago in a military coup, failed Sunday in his attempt to return home to reclaim power, his flight forced to detour after the nation’s de facto rulers said it could not land here and placed army trucks on the runway.

Thousands of Zelaya’s supporters, pressing toward the heavily guarded Tegucigalpa airport in hopes of greeting him, reacted with anger and clashed with soldiers and police who pushed them back.

Troops lined the landing strips and snipers took up positions on the roof of the terminal, which was shut Sunday afternoon after most commercial flights were canceled. Protesters hurled rocks and debris over fences toward the police. Witnesses reported one death and several injuries after security forces fired tear gas and what appeared to be live rounds at people attempting to force their way onto the airport grounds. Military aircraft patrolled overhead.

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As Zelaya’s plane approached Honduran airspace, he spoke live with a Venezuelan television station, saying he couldn’t land.

“They are threatening us, saying we’ll be intercepted, that they’ll put things on the runway if we try to land,” Zelaya told Telesur TV by telephone. “They have blocked our landing.”

He said he was speaking from the cockpit alongside the pilots.

“They’re doing everything they can to land,” he said. But it was a lost cause. Honduran military vehicles could be seen scattered along the runway.

Zelaya’s detour to Nicaragua -- he ultimately was expected in neighboring El Salvador -- capped a long day of suspense and uncertainty as the deposed president insisted he would return to Honduras, and his foes just as adamantly said they’d block him. Reporters, imagining scenarios of scrambled fighter jets and mid-tarmac arrests, stalked the airport, as befuddled luggage-toting passengers (including one group of Christian missionaries from South Carolina) stepped past phalanxes of police to learn their flights had been canceled.

In Washington, U.S. officials said earlier in the day that if Zelaya could not reach Tegucigalpa, he was expected to return to the U.S. capital today for further strategizing. But Zelaya suggested he might remain in Central America and make another effort to return.

Despite the tense standoff, the de facto Honduran government signaled a willingness Sunday to hold “dialogue” with the Organization of American States, the day after the group punished the impoverished country with a rare suspension. Acting Honduran President Roberto Micheletti said he was appointing a delegation to reach out to the OAS, which does not recognize him as chief executive. However, any talks will not address the international community’s central demand, the reinstatement of Zelaya, said the de facto foreign minister, Enrique Ortez.

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“What is not up for discussion is that Honduras has any other president” besides Micheletti, Ortez said.

The leftist Zelaya had clashed with Congress, the courts and the military by pushing ahead with a nonbinding referendum that had been ruled illegal. He was taken from his home by soldiers last Sunday and deported to Costa Rica, the first coup in Central America in 16 years.

One showdown Sunday was in the air, in Zelaya’s attempt to fly home; the other was on the ground, where one of the most violent days yet unfolded.

Huge crowds of Zelaya supporters began converging on the airport starting around midday and remained fairly peaceful as they surged closer to security forces ringing the facility. As tensions rose and rumors spread that Zelaya would not be allowed to land, witnesses said, groups of youths began hurling rocks and bottles at security forces and attempted to scale a fence into the airfield.

The Red Cross reported that one person, about 19, was killed and that seven others were wounded.

The acting government imposed a 6:30 p.m. curfew, 3 1/2 hours earlier than the one in place after the coup.

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Honduras blocked international cable television channels from broadcasting the clashes with a synchronized transmission of Micheletti’s news conference from earlier in the day.

In that appearance, Micheletti claimed that troops from Nicaragua, whose president, Daniel Ortega, is allied with Zelaya, were mobilizing at Honduras’ border. Pressed about the claim, Micheletti said that in fact, the groups of soldiers were small, might be acting without authorization and were not very close to the border after all. Ortega, speaking from Managua, the Nicaraguan capital, emphatically denied any mobilization.

Alfredo San Martin, head of the civilian aviation authority in Tegucigalpa, said Zelaya’s Venezuelan-registered plane was never going to be allowed to land in Honduras. Rather than attempt to intercept the jet in flight, Honduran security forces would surround it on the ground if it touched down and arrest everyone on board, San Martin said.

“It is very difficult for a plane to land without permission,” he said. If Zelaya did, “he’d be violating laws.” Of course, San Martin added, “narco-traffickers do it all the time.”

San Martin, a retired colonel, contradicted himself several times within the space of 15 minutes on whether Zelaya’s flight ever requested permission to land, and he said Honduran air controllers had been in contact with Zelaya’s plane around midday as it approached Honduran airspace -- a time at which it still had not left Dulles airport in Washington.

There seemed to be a concerted effort to assert that the plane was bound for San Salvador long before it actually was, perhaps as a way to discourage Zelaya’s followers.

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Zelaya’s opponents said they had been convinced he was going to use the referendum to rewrite the constitution to end term limits and use that to remain in power indefinitely. But the way in which he was deposed has won Zelaya broad international support.

Initially, a delegation of Latin American presidents was going to accompany him on his attempt to return home. In the end, with the security concerns, only the president of the General Assembly of the United Nations, Miguel D’Escoto Brockmann, a former Sandinista foreign minister, was aboard Zelaya’s plane, while the other presidents traveled in a separate aircraft.

In Washington, senior Obama administration officials said that the U.S. had put a “pause” on its non-humanitarian aid to Honduras, adding to the pressure on the post-coup government of one of the poorest countries in the hemisphere.

The OAS suspension in effect locks out Honduras from accessing credit lines from the Inter-American Development Bank.

The Obama administration has allowed the OAS to take the public lead in the crisis. However, a senior official also said that the U.S. has been making contacts and “direct efforts” with other parties in an attempt to help end the standoff. It is, he said, “a very fluid and challenging situation.”

The Micheletti government all week long had said it would arrest Zelaya if he returned to Honduras. The attorney general’s office has drafted a complaint with 18 criminal charges against him, including treason, abuse of power and failure to enforce scores of laws.

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Micheletti was asked Sunday why, given the charges against Zelaya, authorities didn’t just arrest him instead of preventing him from landing.

“We have insisted that we don’t want conflicts,” Micheletti said, and Zelaya’s return and arrest “could generate bloodshed.”

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wilkinson@latimes.com

Renderos is a special correspondent

Times staff writer Don Lee in Washington contributed to this report

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latimes.com/honduras

Go online for more reports and photographs of the Honduras unrest.

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