The Star Malaysia

Honduras finishes vote recount

However, no winner is declared.

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Tegucigalp­a: Honduran electoral authoritie­s concluded a recount, 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.

“We have now finished this recount,” Supreme Electoral Tribunal president David Matamoros said early yesterday, announcing that Hernandez had 42.98% of the vote compared with opposition leader Salvador Nasralla’s 41.39%.

He added that the body could take up to 22 days to declare an official winner because of possible appeals.

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

On Sunday, Nasralla supporters in the capital of Tegucigalp­a marched near to where the count was resumed, banging on pots, blaring vuvuzelas and singing campaign songs which included insults towards Hernandez.

“They are stealing our votes,” a visibly angry Jesus Elviz, a 58-yearold accountant, said.

On Friday, 19-year-old Kimberly Fonseca was killed by a bullet during a confrontat­ion between protesters and the police. Her family says she was killed by police, a claim the authoritie­s said they were “exhaustive­ly” investigat­ing.

After the violent protests erupted – with some reports of looting – the government declared a state of emergency and imposed a 10-day curfew in an attempt to curb the unrest.

Hernandez’s conservati­ve National Party – which controls the executive, legislativ­e and judicial branches of government – is constituti­onally barred from a second term, but it contends that a 2015 Supreme Court ruling allows his re-election.

Nasralla and his leftist coalition, the Opposition Alliance Against the Dictatorsh­ip, have denounced the incumbent’s bid as illegal.

Situated in the heart of Central America’s “Northern Triangle”,

We urge all candidates and all parties to put Honduras first. David Matamoros

where gangs and poverty are rife, Honduras has one of the highest murder rates in the world – though it has fallen under Hernandez.

What credit he claims from that progress, however, is counterbal­anced by tensions over his re-election bid.

It is a loaded issue in Honduras, where former president Manuel Zelaya was toppled in a coup in 2009 – notably because he was accused of plotting to change the constituti­on to stand for a second term.

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 ??  ?? Peaceful gesture: Soldiers standing guard as a supporter of Nasralla holds flowers during a protest. — Reuters
Peaceful gesture: Soldiers standing guard as a supporter of Nasralla holds flowers during a protest. — Reuters
 ??  ?? Call to action: Nasralla (left) giving a speech to thousands of supporters during a demonstrat­ion. — AFP
Call to action: Nasralla (left) giving a speech to thousands of supporters during a demonstrat­ion. — AFP

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