We have to go on
fighting
•
Affirms first lady of Honduras Leads yesterday’s
march
AFTER having been hunted down along with her
family, the first lady of Honduras, Xiomara Castro,
yesterday headed a mass march in Tegucigalpa for
democracy, against the coup d’état and for the
restoration of the Honduran constitutional president,
Manuel Zelaya.
In
her speech to the population engaged in non-violent
resistance, Xiomara affirmed her solidarity with the
Honduran people and the families of the victims of
the dictatorial coup regime installed in that
country after the coup d’état.
At the same time, she called on the people to go
on fighting, not to be afraid, "because what we are
doing is right. We have to continue expressing
ourselves, because we are all equal before a small
group that is imposing force."
"I want to demonstrate my solidarity with the
people who, in one way or another, have been abused
by our country’s armed forces, as well as with the
families of those who have lost their children, who
were killed not as delinquents, but because they
were fighting for the return of constitutional order
and democracy in the country," she stated.
She affirmed that it is the people who have given
her strength, "that this blood that ran on this land
is not in vain, that it has meaning and will serve
to achieve the return of democracy, the rights of
our people and of peace in our country."
Xiomara Castro de Zelaya confirmed that, from
this Tuesday, she will constantly accompany "all the
efforts made for peace, to allow the people to be
consulted, to be able to express themselves."
The wife of the country’s constitutional
president was underground until Monday for her
personal security. However, in her words to the
crowds gathered in support of her husband, she
stated that she could not remain in hiding because
her life was in danger, while "there are men and
women who are giving their hearts and their lives to
this cause… I couldn’t keep quiet in this struggle,
far less, because I believe in it."
"President Zelaya raised this banner, which is
not his, but that of the people, but not those
people joining marches with women who have just come
out of the beauty salons or wearing expensive
sunglasses, but the real people that we are seeing
here, the majority in our country, campesinos,
workers and other sectors," she emphasized.
She condemned the fact that the coup perpetrators
have trampled on the constitutional rights of all
the people, on human rights and justice. "Today,
there is no security for anybody; today they can
freely enter people’s homes; today they can kill;
today they can take people prisoner, and so we have
to keep speaking out against all this."
Xiomara Castro criticized the media blockade
being maintained in Honduras, although the coup
faction insists that there is freedom of expression,
and the continuing persecution of the people and of
journalists.
The night before, Zelaya’s wife attended a
meeting of leaders of trade unions, campesino,
student, youth and other organizations, who have
committed themselves to redoubling their peaceful
demonstrations to achieve the restoration of
constitutional order in the country. (SE)