Latin America & Caribbean

Violence in Honduras mounts as election vote count nears end, 1 dead

At 9pm Honduras’ electoral court says it will announce the results from last Sunday’s presidential election. Incumbent President Juan Orlando Hernandez held a lead of more than 46,000 votes over challenger Salvador Nasralla before the last-stage count.
1 Dic 2017 – 12:14 PM EST
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A supporter of opposition presidential candidate Salvador Nasralla throws a rock at police near the Honduran electoral authority offices where votes are still being counted from November 2017 election.
Crédito: AP/Rodrigo Abd

TEGUCIGALPA, Honduras (AP) — Protesters and police clashed violently Thursday as incumbent President Juan Orlando Hernandez emerged with a growing lead for re-election following a reported computer glitch that shut down vote counting for several hours.

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Challenger Salvador Nasralla has alleged fraud and said he won’t respect the official results. He’s watched an initial five-point lead diminish in recent days as official results have trickled out.

Thursday night, Hernandez was ahead by more than 45,000 votes with nearly 93 percent of Sunday’s votes processed. He had 42.9 percent of the vote to Nasralla’s 41.4 percent.

Opposition supporters protested throughout the day and into the night outside the electoral court’s facilities and on major boulevards, setting up roadblocks and lighting bonfires in the streets. Hooded demonstrators threw rocks and pieces of wood at riot police carrying batons and shields, who responded forcefully with tear gas and water cannons as calls to maintain calm were increasingly unheeded.

David Matamoros, president of the electoral court, said Thursday that officials had not finished counting in part because overnight they had to evacuate after tear gas drifted into the building.

He said that about 2,000 electoral reports from polling sites contained “inconsistencies,” including lacking signatures from members of the polling sites or not having seals. Those will most likely require a special count and it was unclear how many votes were at play in those cases, he said.

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Representatives of the Organization of American States called for transparency in the count.

Honduras’ influential Private Business Council urged the electoral court to wait until all the votes are counted before announcing the result.

Across the country, columns of smoke rose from tires set ablaze in the streets.

In Tegucigalpa, protesters and riot police faced off amid billowing clouds of gas. Officers with batons and tear gas closed two central boulevards, and water cannons were deployed for crowd control.

At least four people were admitted to the University School Hospital with injuries to the head and neck. Red Cross workers also attended to people in the streets, including one young protester bleeding profusely from the head. In the northern municipality of Santa Rita, police reported that two officers and a member of the military were injured by opposition protesters.

“We will be on guard all night,” said Lastenia Figueroa, an office worker who took part in the demonstrations in Tegucigalpa.

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The Public Safety Department warned that it would “peacefully clear out the protesters because they are blocking traffic.” It reported more disturbances in at least eight cities besides the capital.

Many schools and universities in the capital announced they would be closed through the weekend to keep students out of harm’s way. The Association of Banking Institutions recommended branches close Thursday afternoon in anticipation of street clashes.

Nasralla via Twitter asked his supporters to continue to protest peacefully and not be provoked into violence. Luis Zelaya, candidate for the Liberal Party, who was running a distant third in the tally, called for his supporters to “defend democracy.”

Caritas de Honduras, the social service arm of the Catholic Church, scolded all parties Thursday for calling their supporters into the streets.

“That situation every day makes integration of society and the recovery of governability more distant,” it said in a statement.

Former President Manuel Zelaya, whose Libre party was part of Nasralla’s coalition, called for international observers to organize a public count of ballots to alleviate concerns of manipulation. He spoke on Honduras’ Canal 5 television Thursday.

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“That is a practical and definitive solution to exit the crisis Hernandez has gotten us into,” said Zelaya, who was ousted from office in a coup orchestrated by Hernandez’s National Party in 2009. He was accused of plotting to violate the constitution by seeking just the sort of re-election that Hernandez is trying for.

But the ruling National Party showed no sign of backing down. Party director Jesus Mejia told The Associated Press that with the remaining votes coming from rural areas, Hernandez would win by more than 50,000 votes.

Both candidates have declared themselves the winner. Late Wednesday, Nasralla disavowed an agreement he and Hernandez had signed with the Organization of American States to respect the official results.

“I signed that document before the electoral court’s computing center went down, and that was a trap,” Nasralla said at a news conference. “The agreement with the OAS was to respect trustworthy results without alterations ... and the court has altered the documents in the last two days. That is unacceptable.”

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Hernandez said he would respect the result and called for calm while the final votes were counted.

Matamoros said the computer problem was resolved and did not affect the vote.

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A protester masked in the middle of the fray. A Dec 15 report by the state commissioner for Human Rights of Honduras (Conadeh), stated that the protests have resulted in 16 deaths, "an unquantified number of injured" and at least 1,675 arrests. Among those killed are 2 policemen and 14 demonstrators. Photo by Reuters.
2/21
The National Front of Popular Resistance (FNRP), which emerged after a 2009 coup, has called for a "national mobilization" to defend "the victory" of Nasralla.
3/21
The opposition Alliance Party, whose presidential candidate is Salvador Nasralla, are calling for more protests. Economic losses are already estimated at $63 million, according to a report from the Honduran Chamber of Insurers. Photo by Efe.
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AP/Rodrigo Abd
4/21
Opposition presidential candidate Salvador Nasralla, who is calling for a re-do of the election, bangs two pan lids as he greets supporters during a protest near the institute where election ballots are stored in Tegucigalpa, Honduras, Sunday, Dec. 3, 2017. Residents of Honduras' capital are bracing for more demonstrations after a night of pot-banging protests over the long-delayed vote count in last week's presidential elections. ny manipulation of the ballots.
Crédito: AP/Rodrigo Abd
RODRIGO ARANGUA/AFP/Getty Images
5/21
The patience of the Hondurans is ran out when election results were delayed for five days.
Crédito: RODRIGO ARANGUA/AFP/Getty Images
6/21
Protesters shout slogans during a government imposed dawn-to-dusk curfew in Tegucigalpa, Honduras, on December 3, 2017. Photo: AP/Rodrigo Abd
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AP Photo/Rodrigo Abd
7/21
The protests grew Thursday due to the delay after President Juan Orlando Hernández took a slight lead in the vote count, sparking complaints of fraud from his opponent, Salvador Nasralla.
Crédito: AP Photo/Rodrigo Abd
AP Photo/Rodrigo Abd
8/21
An initial count favored Nasralla by five points with 57 percent of the votes counted. But election computers then mysteriously went down and two days later Hernandez, the incumbent president was leading.
Crédito: AP Photo/Rodrigo Abd
AP Photo/Rodrigo Abd
9/21
The authorities reported protests in different parts of the capital Tegucigalpa and in the interior of the country, where supporters of the opposition alliance blocked roads.
Crédito: AP Photo/Rodrigo Abd
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10/21
Relatives of Kimberly Fonseca who was shot during a protest mourn next to her coffin in Tegucigalpa. Photo: Edgard Garrido/Reuters.
AP Photo/Rodrigo Abd
11/21
At least nine people were injured in protests in the capital, Tegucigalpa, as well as two policemen and one soldier, emergency services said.
Crédito: AP Photo/Rodrigo Abd
AP Photo/Rodrigo Abd
12/21
Nasralla called on his followers to demonstrate peacefully. "Do not let yourselves be provoked by Hrnandez activists," he said. The president asked Hondurans to wait calmly wait for the results.
Crédito: AP Photo/Rodrigo Abd
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AP Photo/Rodrigo Abd
13/21
Six of the nine injured people suffered bullet wounds, Reuters reported.
Crédito: AP Photo/Rodrigo Abd
AP Photo/Rodrigo Abd
14/21
In streets across the country columns of smoke could be seen from burning tires set alight by demonstrators, as well as police tear gas.
Crédito: AP Photo/Rodrigo Abd
AP Photo/Rodrigo Abd
15/21
La policía reportó que uno de sus agentes y un militar fueron atacados por simpatizantes de la Alianza Opositora en Santa Rita, una localidad situada 99 millas al norte de la capital, Tegucigalpa, informó AP.
Crédito: AP Photo/Rodrigo Abd
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16/21
Al Hospital Escuela Universitario de esta capital ingresaron al menos cuatro hombres con golpes en la cabeza y el tórax a causa de los enfrentamientos violentos ocurridos en numerosos puntos de la capital y el resto del país, según informó el vocero Miguel Osorio de esa institución.
Crédito: RODRIGO ARANGUA/AFP/Getty Images
RODRIGO ARANGUA/AFP/Getty Images
17/21
Los simpatizantes de Nasralla prendieron fuego a una bodega de madera y láminas, que ardió por diez minutos, en el bulevar Centroamérica de Tegucigalpa. Tanquetas militares arrojaron fuertes chorros de agua a las llamas y las apagaron.
Crédito: RODRIGO ARANGUA/AFP/Getty Images
RODRIGO ARANGUA/AFP/Getty Images
18/21
La Secretaría de Seguridad señaló que acciones violentas similares se registran en las ciudades de San Pedro Sula, La Ceiba, Villanueva y Choloma en la costa atlántica; Santa Bárbara y Ocotepeque, al oeste; Catacamas al este, y Choluteca, al sur.
Crédito: RODRIGO ARANGUA/AFP/Getty Images
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19/21
"Este caos lo genera el afán desmedido de poder de Juan Orlando Hernández”, dijo Juan Salinas, uno de los manifestantes, en declaraciones a AP.
Crédito: RODRIGO ARANGUA/AFP/Getty Images
RODRIGO ARANGUA/AFP/Getty Images
20/21
Cáritas de Honduras, el brazo de acción social de la Iglesia católica, criticó a los partidos y el gobierno por llamar a la gente a salir a protestar.“Esa situación hace cada día más lejana la integración de la sociedad y la recuperación de la gobernabilidad", señaló en un comunicado.
Crédito: RODRIGO ARANGUA/AFP/Getty Images
21/21
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