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World

Honduras poll crisis widens with police revolt

Published December 5, 2017 Updated December 5, 2017 08:09pm

TEGUCIGALPA: A political crisis in Honduras triggered by a disputed presidential election deepened Tuesday, after hundreds of police revolted against an order to impose a curfew.

The police, many of them members of an anti-riot unit called the "Cobras" joined by other officers, went into the street in the capital Tegucigalpa late Monday to show their rejection of the order. Locals applauded their presence.

"The truth is we don't want to fight the people any more," one of the officers said, declining to give his name and his face hidden by a ski mask.

The rebellion signals a potentially dangerous new turn in the crisis that has unfolded since the November 26 vote in which President Juan Orlando Hernandez controversially sought re-election.

His bid was made possible by a 2015 Supreme Court ruling overturning a constitutional ban on more than one presidential term -- a decision that sparked criticism.

But a TV-presenter-turned-politician picked as the leftwing opposition's candidate, Salvador Nasralla, 64, caused an upset in the election.

Initially, Nasralla emerged with an early lead, but that was whittled down and then reversed after a much-delayed counting of ballots that the opposition alleged was marred by fraud.

As protests turned violent and pillaging was reported, Hernandez's government last week ordered a state of emergency with a nighttime curfew.

A teenage girl was killed in one clash, her family said, blaming the police who responded by saying they were investigating.

The rebellion by some of the police showed Hernandez's authority could be crumbling.

 

- 'No more blood' -

 

If that is the case, Honduras -- a small Central American nation of 10 million beset by gang violence, corruption and poverty -- could be in the grips of its worst crisis since 2009, when then-president Manuel Zelaya was ousted in a coup.

"What we are demanding is that peace return, that the problem be resolved and that there are no more deaths, no more blood," the police officer in the ski mask told AFP.

The public safety minister, however, downplayed the police row, calling it part of a dispute over pay and Christmas bonuses.

On Monday, Honduras' Supreme Electoral Tribunal said the final ballot count showed Hernandez with 42.98 percent of the vote, barely ahead of Nasralla with 41.39 percent.

But it declined to name an election winner, saying appeals could yet be lodged.

Nasralla told AFP he "cannot accept anything," and refused to recognize the tribunal's count.

A coordinator for a group of European Union poll observers, Marisa Matias, urged the tribunal to hold off on naming a winner, saying "the electoral process is far from finished."

The head of the mission from the Organization of American States, Jorge Quiroga, also highlighted the narrow margin given between Hernandez and Nasralla, as well as "irregularities" in the election.

Copyright AFP (Agence France-Press), 2017

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