Deposed Honduran President Manuel Zelaya is expected to be back in the capital city of Tegucigalpa on Sunday.
Thousands of supporters already started a march to the international airport on Sunday morning to see "Mel" as many call the ousted president. It is not known yet if buses coming from other parts of country are going to make it into the city. On Saturday they tried but the Armed Forces didn't allow them to get in.
In Washington, the Organization of the American States (OAS) met on Saturday where all its 33 members gave their vote to expel Honduras from the organization.
Until now, Cuba was the only country that wasn't part of it. Its membership was suspended almost a half a century ago at the height of the cold war.
Congress-elected President Roberto Micheletti said Hondurans can live with it. "If Cuba did, so we can," he said.
At the OAS meeting, Zelaya received mixed advices from its participants, whereas Venezuelan Councillor Nicols Maduro urged the president to return home on Sunday, and Costa Rica's representative Javier Sancho Bonilla gave a short speech stating it wouldn't be a good idea for the president to return yet because peace in the country could be disrupted.
Zelaya's supporters are not the only ones awaiting for him. The Armed Forces have taken the airport restricting entrance to civilians. All flights were canceled. People trying to get into the airport to check in were turned away.
Meanwhile tension is everywhere. Nobody knows what's going to happen but Micheletti's government made it clear that Zelaya will be arrested as soon as he sets foot into Honduran soil.
Source: Xinhua