Stabroek News Sunday

Thousands in Honduras march in anti-government protest

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- Thousands of people took to the streets of the Honduran capital yesterday in antigovern­ment protests against leftist President Xiomara Castro, angered by attempts to engineer what they say is an unconstitu­tional power grab.

In a demonstrat­ion sponsored by opposition parties, protesters in the Central American country accused the Castro government of seeking to transform Honduras by hand picking public officials.

“We are here in defense of democracy because we do not want a dictatorsh­ip in Honduras like those in Cuba, Venezuela and Nicaragua, which is what the leftist government of President Xiomara Castro is leading us to,” David Chávez, president of the right-wing National Party told reporters yesterday.

Roughly 10,000 people gathered in Tegucigalp­a, the capital, according to a Reuters eyewitness, in a march that ended without incident. An official estimate from the Honduran authoritie­s was not immediatel­y provided.

The opposition protest was sparked after the ruling party elected a new interimchi­ef prosecutor on November 1, without holding a congressio­nal vote.

Lawmakers with Castro’s Liberty and Refoundati­on Party (Libre) used a committee vote where their members make up a majority to secure the nomination, even though they represent a minority in the Congress overall. The opposition claims the move was unconstitu­tional.

The Honduran constituti­on stipulates that 86 votes from the 128-member unicameral legislatur­e are needed to elect the attorney general, but it also gives the committee the power to pick an interim chief prosecutor if the post is vacant.

Castro, who was sworn in as Honduras’ first woman president in January 2022 and describes herself as a democratic socialist, has sought to strengthen diplomatic relations with the government­s of Cuba, Venezuela and Nicaragua.

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