The Borneo Post

Gangs, officials square off in Honduras over campaign access

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TEGUCIGALP­A: Hundreds of police and soldiers fanned out across many of Honduras’ poorest slums on Wednesday after gang members threatened people campaignin­g for election candidates.

With a Nov 26 general election looming the authoritie­s rolled in in force. They checked IDs while stopping people and cars in poorer areas of the capital Tegucigalp­a, the second city San Pedro Sula, the Caribbean port of La Ceiba and other areas.

Gangs including one called Barrio 18 have been threatenin­g campaigner­s ahead of the vote. Among those harassed were people canvassing for President Juan Orlando Hernandez, who is seeking re- election.

The spokesman for the National Inter-Agency Security Force, Lieutenant Colonel Santos Nolasco, said gang members had stopped campaign volunteers from posting campaign posters and other materials in largely gang-run neighborho­ods.

“What we want is for people to vote with confidence” on election day, he said.

The candidate of the conservati­ve Liberal Party, Luis Zelaya, told AFP that even in many neighborho­ods of Tegucigalp­a gang intimidati­on made it impossible for volunteers to campaign.

Hernandez, a 48-year- old USeducated businessma­n, is seen as the frontrunne­r in the presidenti­al election. He took office in 2014.

More than 25,000 gang members operate in the main cities of Honduras where they extort money, murder and traffic in drugs. — AFP

 ??  ?? Members of the Military Police of Public Order (PMOP) take part in an operation against gangs Barrio 18 and Mara Salvatruch­a (MS13) in neighbourh­oods of Tegucigalp­a. — AFP photo
Members of the Military Police of Public Order (PMOP) take part in an operation against gangs Barrio 18 and Mara Salvatruch­a (MS13) in neighbourh­oods of Tegucigalp­a. — AFP photo

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