Ousted Honduran President Manuel Zelaya said on Tuesday his return to the country is imminent and he will not use violence.
The return will be with "peace flags" to signify nonviolent resolution, Zelaya told journalist in the Nicaraguan city of Ocotal, 21 km south of the Honduras border, after learning about the Honduran justice tribunal's decision to allow his family's free transit to the border with Nicaragua.
The decision to suspend the military checkpoints to allow free transit could imply that the mistake (the coup) must be repaired, Zelaya said.
Zelaya has established his office in Ocotal where hundreds of Hondurans summoned by him have arrived. He planed to organize a peaceful resistance against the interim Honduran government.
Zelaya made his remarks also after the United States announced Tuesday the revocation of diplomatic visas for some interim Honduran officers.
This was a message to the Honduran people that the government of U.S. President Barack Obama does not support the interruption of the democratic course in Honduras, Zelaya said.
Sources from Honduras said the Supreme Court magistrate who ordered the arrest of Zelaya and the president of Honduras' Congress were among the officers whose visas were revoked by the United States.