Honduras opposition candidate leads presidential poll
With over 50% votes counted Nasralla leads president Hernandez’s by over 5% of votes
TEGUCIGALPA: Initial election results released early on Monday in Honduras showed opposition candidate Salvador Nasralla leading President Juan Orlando Hernandez, after a tense evening that saw both men declare themselves the winner before official numbers were announced.
With 57 per cent of the ballots counted, the leftist Nasralla had claimed 45.17 per cent of votes compared to Hernandez’s 40.21 per cent, according to the country’s Supreme Electoral Tribunal (TSE).
The opposition has denounced the Constitutional Court’s decision to allow Hernandez to run again for president despite a one-term limit, a move that has sparked fears of a crisis in the crime-racked country.
Minutes before the initial figures were released, Hernandez, 49, reassured his supporters in the capital Tegucigalpa that he was ahead, after having already declared himself the winner.
Backers of the 64-year-old Nasralla − who represents the Alliance Against the Dictatorship coalition − meanwhile chanted victory slogans and carried red flags.
“We defeated the dictatorship and defeated the fraud, I knew we could win,” said Julio Lainez, a 22-yearold student.
But upon hearing the preliminary official results Hernandez said they were “not conclusive,” claiming they included only urban areas.
“We have to be careful, patient, and take the process until the end,” he said.
An estimated six million people were eligible to cast ballots, electing not just a president but also members of Congress, mayors and members of the Central American Parliament.
Though both candidates proclaiming themselves president had stoked fears of unrest, election observers said the voting process had been smooth.
“What we have seen so far has been positive,” said Marisa Matias, a European parliament observer from Portugal, one of 16,000 monitors.
Hernandez’s conservative National Party − which controls the executive, legislative and judicial branches of government − contends that a 2015 Supreme Court ruling allows his re-election.
The opposition has denounced his bid, saying the court does not have the power to overrule the 1982 constitution.
Hernandez’s main rivals − former TV anchor Nasralla and Luis Zelaya, 50, of the right-leaning Liberal Party − had both said before the vote that they would not recognize a Hernandez victory.
“It’s an atypical electoral process with an illegal re-election,” said Zelaya after voting.
Nasralla, while visiting voting stations around the capital to rally his supporters, urged them to be vigilant for signs of fraud.
“They are out here offering poor people food, roof tiles or cement in exchange for their vote,” he complained.
“I tell them that that’s how they are going to stay poor. I am going to create jobs for them.”
Hernandez cast his vote early in his home town of Gracias, in the country’s mountainous west, accompanied by his daughter and several National Party deputies.