Montreal Gazette

Honduran government facing bankruptcy

CRISIS FUELLED by corruption, election-year politics and struggling economy

- ALBERTO ARCE

“In many ways, the state is no longer functionin­g.”

ROBERT NAIMAN, JUST FOREIGN POLICY

TEGUCIGALP­A — Street surveillan­ce cameras in one of the world’s most dangerous cities were turned off last week because Honduras’ government hasn’t paid millions of dollars it owes. The operator that runs them is now threatenin­g to suspend the police radio service as well.

Teachers have been demonstrat­ing almost every day because they haven’t been paid in six months, while doctors complain about the shortage of essential medicines, gauze, needles and latex gloves.

This Central American country has been on the brink of bankruptcy for months, as lawmakers put off passing a government budget necessary to pay for basic government services. The country is also grappling with $5 billion in foreign debt, a figure equivalent to last year’s entire government budget.

The financial crisis adds to a general sense that Honduras is a country in meltdown, as homicides soar and drug traffickin­g overruns its cities and coasts.

Many streets are riddled with potholes, and cities aren’t replacing stolen manhole covers. Soldiers aren’t receiving their regular salaries, while the country’s education secretary says 96 per cent of schools close several days every week or month because of teacher strikes.

Some government offices must close because they don’t have ink to take fingerprin­ts.

The country’s national registrati­on agency has been shuttered for 10 days because of unpaid salaries.

“In many ways, the state is no longer functionin­g,” said Robert Naiman, policy director of Just Foreign Policy, a Washington-based organizati­on aimed at reforming U.S. foreign policy. “If they keep not paying their soldiers, those soldiers are probably going to stop being soldiers and maybe take some other action.”

Experts say a mix of government corruption, election-year politics and a struggling economy has fuelled the crisis.

The local chapter of the inter national watchdog group Transparen­cy Internatio­nal issued a study in December that alleged some lawmakers had spent money on plane tickets to a tennis tournament in Spain, Mother’s Day gifts and other personal expenses, the report found.

The study’s author, Ludin Ayala, said the country’s Congress is the most expensive in Central America, although Honduras is known as the second-poorest country in Latin America.

Former presidenti­al candidate and legislator Olban Valladares said much of the public money has, indeed, gone into campaigns before November’s elections, in which the president, mayors and 128 congressio­nal representa­tives will be elected.

“Sadly, we have a great number of candidates who are state officials and their tendency is to abuse state resources that they control to fund their campaigns,” Valladares said.

Congress President Juan Orlando Hernandez said that ousted former president Manuel Zelaya and his allies created much of the current mess.

“They are the ones who have left us today with an enormous debt … leaving us a country that’s unsafe, indebted and isolated in the world,” Hernandez said.

Although Congress goes on recess Friday, lawmakers have only partially passed a budget so that the government can pay some of its employees and contractor­s. That leaves undecided the budgets of autonomous institutio­ns such as utilities and the port authority.

Instead, lawmakers are discussing proposals already declared unconstitu­tional by the Supreme Court and don’t deal with the immediate financial problems. On Tuesday, for example, Congress approved a law that would al- low any elected official to be impeached.

Hugo Noe Pino, an economist at Honduras’s Central American Institute for Fiscal Studies, noted that Congress approved the sale of an additional $750 million in bonds last November without resolving any of the core budget issues.

“In this political year, the state resources can be used for political campaigns,” Pino said.

“If they haven’t discussed the budget, why are they approving the financing (through bonds) of a budget that doesn’t exist?”

Financial fraud isn’t limited to the government. Tax evasion, for example, is widespread, with the government missing out on an estimated 43 per cent of revenue due, said Mario Lopez Steiner, Honduras’s tax director.

“The culture of tax evasion is incredible in Honduras,” he said.

The institutio­nal paralysis has also spread to the justice system. The constituti­onal Chamber of the Supreme Court has not met for a month and a half because President Porfirio Lobo accused the magistrate­s of being part of a conspiracy to overthrow him.

Congress, whose majority belongs to Lobo’s party, dismissed several judges without an impeachmen­t trial. Meanwhile, the fired judges continue to enjoy the use of their offices and cars with drivers, even as other government employees go unpaid.

 ?? ORLANDO SIERRA/ AFP/GETTY IMAGES ?? Honduras is one of the main producers of the popular Arabica coffee, but the country is facing a severe financial crisis.
ORLANDO SIERRA/ AFP/GETTY IMAGES Honduras is one of the main producers of the popular Arabica coffee, but the country is facing a severe financial crisis.

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