Orlando Sentinel

Honduran leader appears on his way to a second term

- By Freddy Cuevas

TEGUCIGALP­A, Honduras — Honduran President Juan Orlando Hernandez, a conservati­ve U.S. ally, appeared likely to win a second term on Sunday despite opposition claims that his re-election is an unconstitu­tional power grab.

Hernandez’s popularity is based largely on a drop in violence in the impoverish­ed Central American country, whose homicide rate was once among the world’s worst. Honduras’ National Autonomous University says the rate has dropped to 59 homicides per 100,000 people from a high of 91.6 in 2011.

But corruption and drug traffickin­g allegation­s have cast a shadow over his government, and his reelection bid has fueled charges that his conservati­ve National Party has trampled the country’s institutio­ns in a bid to entrench itself in power.

Fears of just that sort of consolidat­ion — by a leftist rival allied with Venezuela — led Hernandez’s party to back a military coup in 2009 against a president it accused of plotting to violate Honduras’ seemingly iron-clad constituti­onal ban on re-election.

The country’s high court backed the 2009 ouster of President Manuel Zelaya. But the current court is packed with Hernandez supporters, and it ruled in 2015 that the constituti­onal ban was inferior to a citizen’s right to seek re-election, a decision that infuriated opposition leaders.

“Here in Honduras there is no democracy; there is a dictatorsh­ip,” Zelaya told The Associated Press late Saturday. “The hypocrisy of the Honduran elite is evident the people will have to decide at the ballot box.” Now a leader of the main opposition alliance, he warned of possible irregulari­ties in the vote.

Hernandez has used the military to help crack down on crime since taking office four years ago, and his campaign website boasts of praise from Vice President Mike Pence, who has lauded Hernandez “for his leadership in addressing security and governance challenges.”

The president also has reached out to evangelica­l Christians and warned that his rivals would carry Honduras toward a Venezuelan-style crisis — alluding to the fact Zelaya had been backed by the late Venezuelan President Hugo Chavez.

“God our Lord is with us, and we would not do anything without his divine protection,” Hernandez said in a final campaign video posted on his Facebook page.

“We will take a step forward to confront those who seek chaos and those who, allied with foreign forces, try to drag us to a system that has brought only pain and suffering to other societies,” he added.

Turnout appeared to be heavy across the country on Sunday, with relatively minor irregulari­ties reported.

In addition to people in Honduras, tens of thousands of Hondurans were eligible to cast ballots in seven U.S. cities: Atlanta, New Orleans, New York, Los Angeles, Miami, Houston and Washington.

Sunday’s general elections were the tenth in Honduras since the country returned to democracy in 1980 after almost two decades of military regimes.

 ?? MOISES CASTILLO/AP ?? Banners touting Honduran President Juan Orlando Hernandez hang Sunday in Honduras.
MOISES CASTILLO/AP Banners touting Honduran President Juan Orlando Hernandez hang Sunday in Honduras.

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