Curfew imposed as protests over vote grow violent
TEGUCIGALPA, Honduras — At least one opposition protester died in shootings overnight in Honduras after the country announced a curfew and suspended some constitutional rights in the face of protests over a disputed election in which both candidates have claimed victory.
As the ballot count entered its sixth day Saturday, a 19year-old woman was shot to death at a protest supporting opposition candidate Salvador Nasralla by gunmen in two vehicles who witnesses say were police. Another man was seriously wounded in the shooting, and the national police forces said in a statement that two people are believed to have died.
“We still do not know if the assailants were police officers or not, but the case is being thoroughly investigated,” the statement said.
The protests were reminiscent of the 2009 coup that ousted former President Manuel Zelaya, whose Libre party is part of the coalition led by Nasralla that formed in a bid to unseat President Juan Orlando Hernandez.
The country’s electoral court had finished counting nearly 95 percent of the vote boxes from the Nov. 26 presidential election by late Friday and said it would conduct a hand count of 1,031 other boxes that presented “inconsistencies.”
Hernandez held a lead of more than 46,000 votes over Nasralla before the last-stage count. It was not immediately clear how many votes could be at play in the uncounted boxes.
But mistrust has mounted amid strange delays in the vote count and the sudden reversal of Nasralla’s early lead. Rockwielding protesters have increasingly taken to the streets against riot police armed with tear gas, batons and water cannons. National police spokesman Jair Meza said 12 people had been wounded in clashes between police and protesters.
Meza said numerous businesses were damaged and looted in the capital and in San Pedro Sula, where local press reported that protesters had set a bank branch on fire.
By Saturday, Meza said more than 300 people had been detained for looting as they streamed out of shopping centers with electronics and other goods in Tegucigalpa and San Pedro Sula.
Groups of demonstrators also continued blocking highways with burning tires and other debris, in some cases forcing parents to carry their children through the smoking barriers.
In a decree read out on radio and television, the government’s Cabinet chief Jorge Hernandez said late Friday that some constitutional guarantees would be suspended for 10 days to allow the army and police to control the situation. The government declared a curfew from 6 p.m. to 6 a.m. across the country.
“The curfew is to safeguard the security of the country,” President Hernandez said as he left a hotel in the capital after meeting with observers from the Organization of American States and the European Union. “This is the time for the people to feel supported by their armed forces and their police because it cannot be that somebody decides to loot or rob.”
The military reported that 115 men and 23 women were detained in San Pedro Sula for violating the curfew on the first night it was implemented. They were later released.
Earlier, electoral court president David Matamoros said representatives of the political parties would be present for the vote counts and that no announcements would be made until there is a final result.
Heide Fulton, charge d’affaires at the U.S. Embassy in Honduras, said via Twitter Friday that Honduras was beginning an “unprecedented phase in the electoral process.” She called for calm during the count.
Both Nasralla and Hernandez have declared themselves the winner of the election and their parties have urged their supporters to defend the vote in the street. Nasralla and Hernandez have urged calm and warned their supporters to not be provoked into violence.