While the US corporate media prefers to focus on the occasional single murder, the corporate-backed thugs currently holding Honduras hostage are hoping to shut down all contact with the outside world, apparently so they can prepare to commit all sorts of mayhem without our knowing about it:

The most important news, from RNS:

The Micheletti regime, about 4 am this morning, violently dislodged the protesters outside the Brazilian embassy with tear gas, pepper spray and water canons. Radio Globo reports THEY SUSPENDED THE CONSTITUTION and declared a state of emergency. Among the rights suspended are the right of free circulation and assembly.

There are many people hurt, and reports of at least one death as a result. Update: Adrienne Pine, reporting that police are surrounding the hospital where the wounded were brought, says there were “17 critically injured patients (3 already dead)”. Vos el Soberano reports that the police have surrounded the hospital with the injured and are removing them to an unknown location.

From RNS:

Members of the union of electrical workers of the National Electric Company (ENEE) called in to Radio Globo to announce that the Micheletti government intends to cut electricity in the entire country today.

Also from RNS:

The owner of Radio Uno in El Paraiso, called in to Radio Globo this morning to report that last night his station was taken over by the military, that its employees were beaten, arms broken. This morning the military called him and told him he could have the station back and it could broadcast, but only if it did not mention Manuel Zelaya or anything about the events in Tegucigalpa.

We were fortunate to receive a very complete report from DemocracyNow this morning here. The main report of interest was that 500 people were violently removed using tear gas that penetrated the embassy.

Tiempo has barely updated: Lula of Brazil asks for peaceful solution.

Call the State Department at 1-202-647-4000 and the White House at 1-202-456-1111, and get hold of your congresscritters as well. Give them a variant, in your own words, of the following message:

"Work for the unconditional immediate reinstatement of President Zelaya, demand that the Honduran military doesn’t move against the people and their democratically elected president, Mel Zelaya and ensure that the coup plotters will be held responsible for their actions. Any bloodshed will be on the hands of the coup government and security forces."

If you’ve wanted the chance to save a democracy with a phone call, here it is.

The coup plotters have tried to justify their coup by pretending, with the aid of highly-paid lobbyist shills like Lanny Davis, that they are in the right and Manuel Zelaya — who they hate for daring to raise the minimum wage — is in the wrong. But the fact that they are trying to cut off our ability to see into Honduras indicates that they intend to totally drop the pretense of decency once they figure nobody can see them commit their crimes. The two things holding them back so far are the ability of Hondurans with diesel generators to keep the power flowing to the Brazilian Embassy and the radio and TV stations — and our ability to push our leaders to do the right thing.