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BBC NewsMilitant Group Seeks Armistice Not Amnesty For Niger Delta CrisisWall Street JournalIBADAN, Nigeria -- The Movement for the Emancipation of the Niger Delta, or MEND, Saturday advocated for armistice as opposed to amnesty as the next step to take in resolving the region's crisis. "Armistice for freedom fighters is ...Niger Delta Militants Threaten Trans-Saharan PipelineVoice of AmericaNigerian rebels threaten new gas pipeline projectAFPSahara gas pipeline gets go-aheadBBC NewsTHISDAY -The Associated Press -CNNMoney.comall 276 news articles »
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Honduras rebuffed demands by the international community to reinstate President Manuel Zelaya and pulled out of the Organization of American States, thrusting the nation deeper into  crisis.
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Honduras' Supreme Court rebuffed a personal appeal from the Americas' top international diplomat Friday, refusing to restore ousted President Manuel Zelaya before a Saturday deadline.
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The coup that deposed the president of Honduras exposed the small leverage that even millions of dollars in aid and longtime military cooperation will buy.
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A top diplomat says he is heading to Honduras to demand the return of the toppled president. He says if the demand is rejected, sanctions  will likely be imposed on the impoverished  nation.
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Honduras' interim leader warned that the only way his predecessor will return to office is through a foreign invasion, setting up a dramatic showdown with the ousted president.
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Dealing with the first Latin American crisis of his presidency, Barack Obama sought a swift, clear response that would not be interpreted as U.S. interventionism in a region that loathes it.
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Latin American presidents were gathering in Nicaragua for meetings after Honduras' military deposed the country's president, the first military overthrow of a Central American government in 16 years.