Jamaica Gleaner

Honduran ex-president accused of running country as a ‘narco-state’ stands trial in NYC

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FORMER HONDURAN President Juan Orlando Hernández was once touted by US authoritie­s as a key ally in the war on drugs. Now, federal prosecutor­s say the political leader ran his Central American nation as a “narcostate”, collecting millions of dollars from violent cartels to fuel his rise to power.

Nearly two years after his arrest and extraditio­n to the US, Hernández went on trial Tuesday in Manhattan federal court on drug traffickin­g and weapons charges. Jury selection began late in the morning for a trial Judge P. Kevin Castel projected would last two to three weeks.

It’s a stunning fall from grace for a political leader long viewed – by Democratic and Republican administra­tions alike – as beneficial to American interests in the region, including combating the illegal drug trade and helping slow the waves of migrants crossing the southern US border.

That Hernández is being tried in the US rather than his native country underscore­s Honduras’ institutio­nal weakness, said Raúl Pineda Alvarado, a Honduran political analyst and former three-term congressma­n from Hernández’s National Party.

“For Hondurans it signifies how weak our democracy is in terms of the separation of powers,” he said. “Politician­s are not subject

to any control.”

Federal authoritie­s say that for nearly two decades, Hernández profited from drug trades that brought hundreds of thousands of kilos of cocaine into the US, even at times working with the powerful Sinaloa cartel in Mexico.

The millions of dollars in drug money that began flowing to Hernández starting around 2004, in turn, powered his rise from a congressma­n representi­ng his rural home province in western Honduras to president of the National Congress and then two consecutiv­e presidenti­al terms from 2014 to 2022, prosecutor­s say.

In exchange for bribes that propped up his political aspiration­s, US prosecutor­s say, drug trafficker­s were allowed to operate in the country with near

impunity, receiving informatio­n to evade authoritie­s and even law enforcemen­t escorts for their shipments.

During his first winning presidenti­al campaign, Hernández solicited US$1.6 million from a drug trafficker to support his run and those of other politician­s in his conservati­ve political party, federal prosecutor­s say.

His brother also received a US$1 million campaign donation from notorious Sinaloa boss Joaquin ‘El Chapo’Guzmán on the promise the cartel’s drug shipments would find safe passage through Honduras if Hernández was elected.

Federal prosecutor­s in New York spent years working their way up through Honduran drug traffickin­g organisati­ons before reaching the person many believed was at the very pinnacle – Hernández.

He was arrested at his home in Tegucigalp­a, the Honduran capital, in February 2022, just three months after leaving office, and was extradited to the US in April that year.

US Attorney General Merrick Garland said at the time that Hernández abused his position as president “to operate the country as a narco-state”.

Hernández’s lawyers declined to comment ahead of the trial, in which prosecutor­s are expected to rely on testimony from drug trafficker­s and corrupt Honduran law enforcemen­t officials and politician­s.

The former president, who earned a master’s degree from the State University of New York at Albany, has steadfastl­y maintained his innocence, saying the allegation­s are revenge from drug trafficker­s he had extradited to the US.

Hernández faces federal charges including drug traffickin­g conspiracy and possession of machine guns and destructiv­e devices.

Meanwhile his co-defendants – the former head of the Honduran national police, Juan Carlos Bonilla, and Hernández’s cousin, Mauricio Hernández Pineda – both pleaded guilty in recent weeks to drug traffickin­g charges in the same Manhattan courthouse where his trial is occurring.

 ?? AP ?? In this courtroom sketch in Federal court, in New York, on Tuesday, former Honduran President Juan Orlando Hernandez (seated centre) at the defense table, is flanked by his attorneys at the start of his trial.
AP In this courtroom sketch in Federal court, in New York, on Tuesday, former Honduran President Juan Orlando Hernandez (seated centre) at the defense table, is flanked by his attorneys at the start of his trial.

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