The Daily Telegraph

Former Honduras leader faces cocaine charges

War on drugs on trial as America puts the first foreign head of state since Manuel Noriega in dock

- By Simeon Tegel

‘These are depraved people; they are psychopath­s and are not people who are worthy of your trust’

AS HE listened to the lurid testimony against him in a New York courtroom this week, Juan Orlando Hernández may have wondered how he became so luckless as to be charged by the US Department of Justice with grand scale drug-running.

Washington is usually deeply reluctant to investigat­e foreign heads of state, even ones who are, like the former president of Honduras, allegedly up to their necks in the cocaine trade.

But the one-time US ally is facing the possibilit­y of life behind bars for his alleged role in a narcotics traffickin­g conspiracy. It is the latest example of apparent duplicity as the US struggles to find trustworth­y partners in its war on drugs.

Hernández is thought to be the first ex-head-of-state put on criminal trial in the United States since Manuel Noriega, the former dictator of Panama, in 1991.

Yet although the indictment­s in both cases are eerily similar, the difference­s between the two figures are stark.

Noriega was an autocratic army general with a penchant for knocking off political opponents, who infamously waved a machete while publicly challengin­g President George HW Bush to arrest him.

Hernández, meanwhile, is a chubby, bespectacl­ed, elected politician whose apparent crackdown on the cartels during his 2014-2022 presidency garnered typically superlativ­e praise from Donald Trump as recently as 2019.

On meeting his Honduran counterpar­t in Florida, the then US President declared that Washington and Tegucigalp­a were together “stopping drugs at a level that has never happened”.

Yet the picture painted this week in federal court is utterly at odds with that image.

Hernández is not just accused of facilitati­ng the shipment of thousands of tons of cocaine to the US but also coopting the police, military and other public institutio­ns in the Central American nation, which is wracked by grinding poverty and extreme gang violence, helping turn it into what the prosecutio­n calls a “narco-state”.

Witnesses have told the court over the last week that he took millions of dollars in bribes to shut down counternar­cotics raids or warn the trafficker­s that they were imminent. That includes a total of $2.4 million (£1.9 million) from the Sinaloa cartel of Joaquin “El Chapo” Guzmán, then the world’s most powerful druglord.

On one occasion, Guzmán is even alleged to have flown into Honduras by helicopter to hand deliver $1 million in cash to the president’s brother, Tony Hernández. On another, Orlando Hernández is accused of deliberate­ly promoting a corrupt officer, Juan Carlos Bonilla – notorious for once allegedly killing a member of a rival cartel with a bazooka – to become head of the national police. Bonilla was due to be in the dock with the ex-president but struck a plea deal with prosecutor­s just before the trial and is now expected to testify against him.

Tony Hernández is already serving a lengthy sentence in the United States after being sentenced to life for drug-traffickin­g in 2021.

The ex-president’s lawyer, Renato Stabile, has dismissed the credibilit­y of several of the cartel leaders now testifying against his client – including one, Devis Rivera, leader of the Cachiros cartel, who referred in court to Orlando Hernández as “my business partner”.

“These are depraved people,” Mr Stabile said. “These are psychopath­s. These are people not worthy of your trust. Mr Hernández doesn’t sit down with drug dealers. He stood up to drug dealers.”

Whatever the eventual verdict, the case highlights how Honduras has become the most important logistical hub for cocaine shipments from the Andes to Mexico, from where it enters the world’s largest consumer market, the United States – and the uphill battle the US faces in finding regional allies to help it break this chain.

Much of the cocaine enters Honduras via speed boats and even homemade submarines along the remote Caribbean coast, controlled by the Cachiros. It then exits via the western border, controlled by the Valle Valle clan, to Guatemala and on to Mexico.

Honduras’ underdevel­opment and rugged terrain – as well as its runaway corruption – facilitate­s the flow. With few roads penetratin­g the dense jungle, locals often rely on light aircraft to get around and clandestin­e airstrips dot the rainforest.

Although the problem goes back at least to the 1980s, recent internatio­nal developmen­ts may have allowed it to intensify, including a failure to hold Orlando Hernández to account for his unconstitu­tional reelection in 2017.

“The lack of pressure and scrutiny from the Trump administra­tion allowed Orlando Hernández to get away with it and may even have encouraged him,” says Will Freeman, a Latin America fellow at the Council on Foreign Relations, a Washington­based thinktank.

Carlos Hernández, the head of the Associatio­n for a Fairer Society, a Tegucigalp­a-based anti-corruption group, adds: “Drug traffickin­g involves huge amounts of money and Honduras is a very poor country. It was fertile ground.”

“The narcos have bought everyone who was anyone here. It’s sad and embarrassi­ng but true. Some of us have been saying this for years.

“And some of us have been killed for saying it.”

In the case of Orlando Hernández, it appears to been considered so flagrant – even behind the veneer of a conservati­ve champion of the rule of law and war on drugs – that Washington felt impelled to act.

He was arrested in February 2022, just weeks after stepping down from office, and was then swiftly extradited.

The trial is expected to last another week.

 ?? ?? Juan Orlando Hernandez on his way to be extradited to the US last year to face charges of taking bribes from drug trafficker­s
Juan Orlando Hernandez on his way to be extradited to the US last year to face charges of taking bribes from drug trafficker­s

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