Tuesday, 02 January 2024 12:17 GMT

Honduras Election Virtually Tied As Ex-President Is Released From US Prison


(MENAFN- Gulf Times)

Honduran electoral workers were counting vote tallies by hand yesterday with the two presidential frontrunners, Nasry Asfura and Salvador Nasralla, still locked in a virtual tie, two days after an election marked by extraordinary US interference.

As the count continues, former Honduran president Juan Orlando Hernandez of the National Party was released from a US prison on Monday, where he was serving a 45-year prison sentence for drug trafficking and firearms charges, a Federal Bureau of Prisons registry showed.

The former president was convicted of helping to smuggle 400 tonnes of cocaine into the United States.

His release came after US President Donald Trump urged Honduran voters to cast their ballots for the National Party candidate, Asfura, and said he would pardon Hernandez.

A White House official confirmed yesterday that Trump had pardoned Hernandez.

The preliminary results released on Monday show Asfura and Nasralla of the Liberal Party each holding just under 40% of the vote, with Asfura only 515 votes ahead. Rixi Moncada, of the ruling LIBRE Party, was well behind in third with 19% of the vote.

With the razor thin margin, the electoral body declared the race a "technical tie".

Ana Paola Hall, the body's president, called for calm and patience as electoral workers moved into the slower stage of verifying the vote tallies by hand.

The preliminary results are based on tallies digitally transmitted by polling stations across the country.

Trump weighed in on Monday in a social media post in which he alleged, without evidence, that Honduras was "trying to change the results of their Presidential Election”.

"If they do there will be hell to pay! The people of Honduras voted in overwhelming numbers on November 30th," Trump said on his Truth Social platform.

There was high voter turnout in Sunday's election, which was peaceful across the country, according to the Organisation of American States, which observed the vote.

It said in a statement on Monday that it "was able to verify that the voting proceeded normally, except for isolated incidents in some municipalities of the country".

Former president Manuel Zelaya, who is also the husband of current President Xiomara Castro, lambasted Trump's interference in the election, saying on X that it was an attempt to stop Moncada's bid, and vowing the Honduran people would stand up for democracy.

"We who fight for liberty are on our feet," he wrote. "We are patriots and nobody yields."

On Monday evening, Moncada said the elections were "still not lost" and alleged that the other parties had manipulated the process.

She also denounced US interference in the election.

In the run-up, Trump weighed in on the tightly contested race to throw his support behind Asfura, 67-year-old former mayor of Tegucigalpa, in a series of social media posts, saying he could work with him to counter drug trafficking.

He accused Moncada of being a "communist", without providing evidence.

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Gulf Times

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