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"I didn't think it was right that they took the president to Costa Rica," Adolfo Facusse, the head of Honduras' National Association of Industries, told The Associated Press. "As a sector of civil society, we have called for the courts to judge the military because the order was to arrest him." "They should justify it," he said. Zelaya, meanwhile, reiterated a call for tougher U.S. sanctions, saying the interim government would "last five minutes" if the United States imposed trade restrictions. The U.S. is Honduras' largest trade partner and its biggest source of direct foreign investment. "The United States has taken action ... but apparently it's not enough," Zelaya said during a visit to Mexico, where he was warmly greeted by President Felipe Calderon. Zelaya said he would travel to Brazil next week, continuing a Latin American tour designed to underline his international support. The Organization of American States plans to meet Wednesday to organize a high-ranking diplomatic mission that would travel to Honduras in a new effort to pressure coup-installed leaders to restore Zelaya.
[Associated
Press;
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