Friday, March 25, 2011

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HONDURAS: WOUNDED IN HAITI PROTEST

Honduras: 4 injured and 13 arrested in protests

El Nuevo Herald

At least four soldiers were burned and 13 people arrested when police and the army evacuated on Thursday hundreds of teachers who blocked two roads in the capital in which businesses vandalized.

Another 30 individuals were captured on a bus from the south with guns hidden in backpacks. "All of them are already on the order of the Attorney General to determine the responsibility of the case," he said at a press conference the spokesman of the Secretariat Security Commissioner Leonel Sauceda. Teachers protest

for three weeks by the alleged delay by six months the salaries of 6,000 teachers, the financial meltdown Institute for Teachers (Inpremah) and argues against a bill that Congress, which inter alia provides for the surveillance of parents on the implementation of work of teachers.

"Four soldiers were with second-degree burns and are hospitalized, when demonstrators hurled petrol bombs, said Sauceda. The protesters smashed their way glass windows of fast food restaurants with sticks and stones.

authorities dispersed the crowd with water jets and tear gas.

Peaceful demonstrations were reported in San Pedro Sula, the second city, and El Progreso, both in northern Honduras.

street actions are sponsored by the National Front for Popular Resistance (FNRP), comprising supporters of ousted President Manuel Zelaya (2006-2009), and the Federation of Teaching Organizations, composed of five teachers colleges with 70,000 members.

Juan Barahona Barahona, FNRP leader, told Radio Globo: "The fight is against the coup and the government of dictator (Porfirio) Lobo ... and not give up to derail the coup regime."

leader teachers, Edwin Oliva, told the AP that "the struggle continues ... and will continue to achieve our goals because the people are with us."

Wolf told reporters that "if teachers are conscious return to the classroom to teach children and young people because that is an ethical issue."

"The leadership of educators can fight with the government, but not to punish the children," he said.

Zelaya Front and president do not recognize as Wolf, who took office in January 2007 for a four-year management.

Zelaya, deposed in June 2009, lives in the Dominican Republic.

Demonstrations of 12 consecutive days have left a teacher killed by accident, 20 others affected by gas and 60 arrested, police said.


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