ANDI To Pursue Aid to Honduras

The president of the National Association of Industrialists (ANDI), Adolfo Facusse, said they will begin this week a series of meetings with organizations and friendly countries, in which they will begin to discuss the issue of assistance to Honduras. He implied that many participants are integrated into the G-16, a group that includes countries and international financial organizations.

“This week there are several meetings scheduled in various institutions where important discussions will take place,” stated Facusse.

Facusse announced that some of the demands from these institutions and nations are “policy regarding granting of amnesty to deposed President Manuel Zelaya and the resignation of President Roberto Micheletti from his post as president of Honduras.” “The conditions for restoring assistance are political and have nothing to do with the covenant of the Tegucigalpa / San Jose Agreement” … “I imagine that the new president can address these situations in a better way. It is hard to give Zelaya amnesty with this government,” admitted the businessman.

“Some people, however, have told me that some of these agencies began to make disbursements to the private sector in a discreet manner, but in this regard I have nothing confirmed.” “The Central American Bank for Economic Integration (BCIE), is among them, and rumored to have begun disbursing small amounts of resources to the private sector of Honduras,” Facusse said.


3 Responses to "ANDI To Pursue Aid to Honduras"

  1. miraclemant  December 15, 2009 at 11:47 am

    “Iron Lady wannabe” That is a good one. jajaja

    Can you imagine being married to that woman??

  2. Axel Reyes Bogran  December 15, 2009 at 7:22 am

    The ghost of the bad and very wrong reaction that the current American Administration chose to implement as an answer to our correct and very legal porcedings regarding Zelaya is still haunting us.

    Most of those banking organisations are not telling us what to do about Zelaya because we depossed him, but because they think we did it wrong, that we in effect used and commited that by now infamous expression: Coup d’Etat.

    They really have no political inclinations as the other International (ONU; OAS & Anmesty Intl.) but are still reacting to very deailed and written down ways to deal with Governments that result from forced take overs, as well they should.

    This is the foremost priority that Honduras has, to fight the bad reputation that the likes of Obama & Co. had smeared it with.

    Untill we clear our name and take a strong stance against the likes of Valenzuela and his boss, the Iron Lady wannabe, Hillary Clinton, we are going to still face thhis kind of problems.

    We did not do anything wrong, we depossed a criminal who wanted to take our country down a path not of our choosing.

  3. Al  December 14, 2009 at 6:58 pm

    GOOD!!!!!!!!

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