Texarkana Gazette

Honduran president Hernandez starts new term as fiery protests erupt

- By Freddy Cuevas

TEGUCIGALP­A, Honduras—President Juan Orlando Hernandez was sworn in for a new term in the Honduran capital Saturday, while across town tear gas drifted across flaming barricades in clashes between police and protesters angry over an election the say was marred by fraud.

The head of Congress put the blue-and-white sash of office on Hernandez in the morning ceremony in Tegucigalp­a, and the president promised in an address “to begin a process of reconcilia­tion to unite the Honduran family.”

The inaugurati­on came after soldiers and riot police fired tear gas to block thousands of demonstrat­ors from marching to the National Stadium to protest. Masked protesters shot rocks from slingshots and kicked canisters back toward security forces as barricades burned and gas billowed on the streets.

“This is how the dictator oppresses his people,” said opposition presidenti­al candidate Salvador Nasralla, who says the election was stolen and he was the true winner of the vote.

“We remain in the struggle to rescue the country from dictatorsh­ip and without recognizin­g Hernandez as president,” Nasralla told The Associated Press.

Hernandez, a 49-year-old lawyer, is Honduras’ first president to be re-elected—a key point in the protests against him.

The 1982 constituti­on bars presidents from seeking a new term and conservati­ve politician­s deposed a leftist president in 2009 for allegedly even considerin­g re-election. But Hernandez won a Supreme Court ruling in 2015 to get around that prohibitio­n. Early, pre-dawn returns the morning after the Nov. 26 election showed Nasralla with a significan­t lead with 57 percent of the votes counted.

Then election authoritie­s all but stopped giving public updates on the count. Following days of delays and computer problems, the trend reversed itself, and the Supreme Electoral Tribunal reported that Hernandez had an edge of about 1.5 percent in the final count.

The ensuing political crisis has wracked the Central American nation, with at least 31 people killed in the unrest, according to the National Human Rights Commission. Opposition leaders put the toll at 41.

“We must sit down for dialogue openly and without barriers. … If a house is divided against itself, it cannot stand,” Hernandez said in his address.

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