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Ousted Honduran leader calls charges persecution
Former Honduran president Manuel Zelaya said Thursday that new corruption charges brought against him by Honduras' newly elected government amount to political persecution.
Zelaya, who was ousted in a coup last June, said in a statement from the Dominican Republic–where he has taken refuge–that the charges undermine efforts to promote national reconciliation following the coup that ousted him.
He said the charges "seek personal revenge and worsen the political persecution against me, forgetting national reconciliation."
Honduras' anti-corruption prosecutor is seeking to charge Zelaya with allegedly diverting $1.5 million in welfare funds to his campaign for a referendum on reforming the constitution.
Zelaya defied a Supreme Court order to drop plans for the vote, and he already faces abuse of power and treason charges over his defiance of the Supreme Court order.