TEGUCIGALPA, Honduras (AP) Honduras' interim president said
Thursday he may step down temporarily to allow voters to
concentrate on the upcoming presidential elections.
Roberto Micheletti said he will consult his advisers and those
who have supported his government on whether he should step aside
ahead of the Nov. 29 election and until at least Dec. 2, when
Congress is scheduled to vote on whether to reinstate ousted
President Manuel Zelaya.
Micheletti did not say who would be in charge of the government
if he takes the weeklong leave of absence.
''My purpose with this measure is for the attention of all
Hondurans to concentrate on the electoral process and not on the
political crisis,'' Micheletti said in a message broadcast on
national television.
He said he would immediately return to the presidency should
threats to ''order and security arise.''
Micheletti was named president by Congress after Zelaya was
rousted from his bed by soldiers and flown to Costa Rica on June
28.
Zelaya, who has been holed up at the Brazilian Embassy since
slipping back into the country on Sept. 21, called Micheletti's
announcement ''an easy maneuver ... to deceive fools.''
Zelaya again warned that he would not return to the presidency
if Congress votes to restore him after the elections, saying doing
so would legitimize the coup.
''It's illegal and violates the rights of the voters because it
tries to hide a coup d'etat,'' Zelaya said.
Both Zelaya and Micheletti signed an agreement brokered by U.S.
diplomats last month. However, the two sides are now at odds over
whether the pact is being fulfilled.
The accord calls for formation of a national unity government,
but does not require Zelaya's restoration to office, leaving that
decision up to Congress.
Zelaya declared the pact a failure two weeks ago when Micheletti
announced the formation of a unity government before any vote by
Congress.
(Copyright 2009 The Associated Press. All Rights Reserved.)