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출처: Resistance and Repression in Honduras
The pictures above, from Orlando Sierra/AFP/Getty, were taken outside the Presidential Palace following the kidnapping of President Zelaya. More photos of outside the Presidential Palace:
(AP Photo/Esteban Felix)
photos: REUTERS/Oswaldo Rivas
Zelaya supporters took to the streets in an attempt to prevent military reinforcements from arriving at the Presidential Palace:
There are protests all over Tegucigalpa, trying to impede military movements:
(photos: REUTERS/Oswaldo Rivas)
This man holds a banner in support of a referendum for a new Constitution (AP Photo/Esteban Felix). So soldiers punched him:
People cast symbolic votes in today's controversial public opinion polls. While soldiers seized ballot boxes in many locales, in some towns people managed to rescue the seized ballot boxes from the soldiers and cast their votes:
photo: REUTERS/Oswaldo Rivas
Soldiers have been incredibly hostile to the media that is trying to report the story from the ground:
The Washington Post reports: "Soldiers try to prevent journalists from filming as they patrol the area around the presidential palace in Tegucigalpa, Sunday June 28, 2009. Soldiers arrested Honduras' President Manuel Zelaya and disarmed his security guards after surrounding his residence before dawn Sunday, his private secretary said. Protesters called it a coup and flocked to the presidential palace as local news media reported that Zelaya was sent into exile." (AP Photo/Esteban Felix) (Esteban Felix - AP). Another angle of the same news crew:
(photo: REUTERS/Edgard Garrido)
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