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Honduras concludes vote count, but no winner declared

By AFP
05 December 2017   |   3:18 pm
Honduras on Monday finally concluded a much-delayed count from a presidential election held more than a week ago, but refrained from declaring incumbent leader Juan Orlando Hernandez the outright winner as soldiers tried to keep a lid on simmering post-poll unrest.

Members of Honduras National Police and police officers belonging to COBRA Special Riot Command stand outside the COBRA headquarters as they refuse to crack down on demonstrators in Tegucigalpa on December 5, 2017. Honduran electoral authorities concluded a recount early Monday, more than a week after a bitterly contested presidential election that put President Juan Orlando Hernandez in the lead, but they held back from officially declaring him the winner. The police are refusing to crack down on supporters of the candidate for the Opposition Alliance against the Dictatorship, Salvador Nasralla, who refuse to recognise the results announced by the electoral authorities. / AFP PHOTO / ORLANDO SIERRA

Honduras on Monday finally concluded a much-delayed count from a presidential election held more than a week ago, but refrained from declaring incumbent leader Juan Orlando Hernandez the outright winner as soldiers tried to keep a lid on simmering post-poll unrest.

The small Central American nation of 10 million, which suffers chronic violence and prolific gang activity, has been put under nighttime curfew after clashes during protests and some reports of looting.

Late Monday, some police were refusing to enforce the curfew; the public safety minister said the row could be part of a dispute over pay and Christmas bonuses.

On Friday, a 19-year-old woman was fatally shot during a confrontation between protesters and the police. Her family said she was killed by police, a claim authorities are “exhaustively” investigating.

On Monday, police said two officers were fatally shot by unidentified assailants while patrolling during the curfew in the eastern province of Olancho. The deaths were not immediately linked to the political unrest.

Suspicions of fraud
Hernandez’s leftwing rival, Salvador Nasralla, a charismatic former TV presenter, aged 64, repeated allegations of “fraud” in the wake of the November 26 election.

“I cannot accept anything” from the final results released Monday, Nasralla told AFP, refusing to recognize the figures as valid.

“They are not official or final,” he said, reiterating a demand that 5,173 ballots be recounted.

His supporters have taken noisily to the street in past days, banging on pots, blaring vuvuzelas and singing campaign songs which included insults towards the conservative Hernandez.

“They are stealing our votes,” a visibly angry Jesus Elviz, a 58-year-old accountant, told AFP during a march on Sunday.

Suspicions were triggered by the drawn-out ballot count.

In the hours after the vote, an initial tally of more than half the ballots gave the lead to Nasralla, who claimed victory. But then his margin shrank. The Supreme Electoral Tribunal subsequently said its computers had suffered interruptions that slowed counting, and credited Hernandez with a tiny lead.

The tribunal’s president, David Matamoros, announced Monday that the final count showed Hernandez with 42.98 percent of the vote compared with opposition leader Nasralla’s 41.39 percent.

But he said the tribunal was not declaring a winner yet, because of possible appeals that could go on up to late December.

“We urge all candidates and all parties to put Honduras first,” Matamoros said.

A group of European Union election observers echoed that.

“The electoral process is far from finished,” the coordinator of the EU group, Portuguese member of the European Parliament Marisa Matias, told a news conference in Tegucigalpa.

“Please make no declaration of the winner until the process is completed,” she said.

– Election upset –
Hernandez, a 49-year-old lawyer who has been president since 2014, had sought re-election despite a constitutional ban on serving more than one term.

His conservative National Party had argued that a 2015 ruling by the Supreme Court voided that ban.

Going into the election, he was seen as the clear favorite on the strength of his policies clamping down on Honduras’ gang violence and endemic corruption.

He had backing from the United States, which is pouring $750 million into Central America’s so-called Northern Triangle — the poor, gang-infested trio of nations made up of Honduras, El Salvador and Guatemala — to try to stem the outflow of its citizens to the US.

Nasralla, though, provided an upset to the voting prognostics. He and his leftist coalition, the Opposition Alliance Against the Dictatorship, denounced Hernandez’s bid as illegal.

The issue of re-election is especially charged in Honduras, following the toppling of a former leftwing president, Manuel Zelaya, in a 2009 coup.

Zelaya, who had been seen as angling to change the constitution to allow for re-election, ended up returning to Honduras and is part of the coalition backing Nasralla.

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