Generated by DeepSeek V3.2| 2009 Honduran coup d'état | |
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![]() Roberto Breve · CC BY-SA 2.0 · source | |
| Conflict | 2009 Honduran coup d'état |
| Date | 28 June 2009 |
| Place | Tegucigalpa, Honduras |
| Result | Ouster and exile of President Manuel Zelaya; installation of Roberto Micheletti as de facto president. |
| Combatant1 | Government of Honduras, Supporters of Manuel Zelaya |
| Combatant2 | Honduran Armed Forces, National Congress of Honduras, Supreme Court of Honduras |
| Commander1 | Manuel Zelaya |
| Commander2 | Gen. Romeo Vásquez Velásquez, Roberto Micheletti |
2009 Honduran coup d'état. The 2009 Honduran coup d'état was a political crisis that culminated on 28 June 2009 when soldiers of the Honduran Armed Forces, following orders from the Supreme Court of Honduras, detained President Manuel Zelaya and flew him to Costa Rica. The National Congress of Honduras, citing a purported letter of resignation, installed its speaker, Roberto Micheletti, as de facto president, an act widely condemned internationally as a coup. The event triggered a protracted domestic political crisis and significant diplomatic isolation for Honduras.
Tensions escalated in early 2009 when President Manuel Zelaya, aligned with the Bolivarian Alliance for the Peoples of Our America, proposed a non-binding referendum to gauge public support for convening a Constituent assembly. Zelaya argued this was to address profound social inequalities, but his opponents in the National Congress of Honduras, the Supreme Court of Honduras, and the military saw it as an illegal attempt to amend the constitution to lift presidential term limits, following the path of leaders like Hugo Chávez in Venezuela. The Supreme Court ruled the poll illegal, and the Honduran Armed Forces, led by General Romeo Vásquez Velásquez, refused to distribute ballots. Zelaya's subsequent dismissal of General Vásquez was overturned by the court, creating a direct constitutional clash. Key business elites, media outlets like El Heraldo, and the opposition Liberal Party of Honduras faction led by Roberto Micheletti mobilized against Zelaya's actions.
In the early morning of 28 June 2009, soldiers from the Honduran Army stormed the presidential residence in Tegucigalpa, apprehended President Manuel Zelaya, and forcibly flew him to San José. Simultaneously, military units seized Televisión Nacional de Honduras and suspended civil liberties. Later that day, the National Congress of Honduras, citing a disputed resignation letter, voted to remove Zelaya from office and appointed congressional speaker Roberto Micheletti as successor. Micheletti's government immediately declared a curfew. Zelaya, from exile, denounced the action as a kidnapping and coup. Protests erupted in Tegucigalpa and San Pedro Sula led by grassroots organizations like the National Front of Popular Resistance.
The international response was overwhelmingly condemnatory. The United Nations General Assembly and the Organization of American States demanded Zelaya's immediate restoration. Key regional powers including the United States under President Barack Obama, Brazil, Venezuela, and Mexico denounced the coup and suspended diplomatic ties. The European Union froze aid, and several Latin American nations withdrew their ambassadors from Tegucigalpa. The OAS suspended Honduras's membership in July, a rare move illustrating regional unity against military intervention. However, divisions emerged as some conservative governments and factions within the U.S. Congress were more cautious in labeling the event a classic coup, which would have triggered an automatic aid cutoff under U.S. law.
Roberto Micheletti's de facto government faced intense domestic protests and international isolation but remained in power for months. A negotiated agreement, the Tegucigalpa/San José Accord, facilitated by Óscar Arias of Costa Rica and later the United States Department of State, ultimately failed to restore Manuel Zelaya before scheduled elections. The November 2009 general elections, won by National Party candidate Porfirio Lobo Sosa, were recognized by many in the international community as a path to normalization, though nations like Brazil and Argentina withheld recognition for a time. Zelaya returned to Honduras in 2011 after a reconciliation deal. The crisis deeply polarized Honduran society and weakened its democratic institutions.
The event sparked intense debate over its legal characterization. The de facto authorities and the Supreme Court of Honduras defended the action as a constitutional and democratic removal of a president who had violated the law, specifically articles 239 and 374 of the Honduran Constitution concerning presidential succession and unalterable term limits. They framed it as a "constitutional substitution," not a coup. In contrast, the Inter-American Commission on Human Rights, the United Nations, and most international legal scholars classified it as a coup d'état, arguing the use of the military to forcibly expel a president exceeded legal constitutional mechanisms. The Supreme Court's arrest order for Zelaya, based on charges including treason and abuse of authority, remains a central point of legal contention.
Category:2009 in Honduras Category:Coups d'état in Honduras Category:June 2009 events