Protesters demand a new president and end to a week-long election debacle which has plunged the country into its worst political crisis since 2009 coup

This article is more than 2 years old

This article is more than 2 years old

Tens of thousands took to the streets across Honduras on Sunday, demanding a new president and an end to a week-long election debacle which has plunged the volatile country into its worst political crisis since a coup in 2009.

Honduras troops shoot dead teenage girl amid election crisis protests Read more

“Out with JOH” was the unifying chant, sung by protesters who accuse Juan Orlando Hernández of meddling with the vote count in order to deny victory to the opposition Alliance leader, Salvador Nasralla.

The country’s beleaguered electoral commission (TSE) made a long-awaited announcement on how it plans to resolve the crisis just as the marches got under way.

After a week of delays, negotiations and accusations of bias and incompetence, the chief magistrate of the TSE, which is controlled by the ruling National party, announced that the election winner would be declared after a recount of just 1,000 suspicious voting tallies.

The Alliance, which has a list of 11 demands it believes are necessary to ensure a fair and transparent vote count, slammed the decision as inadequate and said it would not attend the recount or accept the results. As the news spread, protesters grew louder, blowing horns and throwing firecrackers.

“The latest decision is one of a conglomerate of actions during the electoral process that we refuse to recognise … we won’t permit allow this to happen, just like we won’t allow another Hernández government,” said Dina, 34, an anthropologist marching in Tegucigalpa.



Q&A How have you been affected by the events in Honduras? Show Hide If you have been affected by the events in Honduras you can tell us about it using our encrypted form, or by sending your pictures and videos to the Guardian securely via WhatsApp by adding the contact +44(0)7867825056.

Your stories will help our journalists have a more complete picture of these events and we will use some of them in our reporting. Your safety is most important, so please ensure that you’re taking this into account when recording or sharing your content.

Some protesters wanted fresh elections. “We need new elections so the people know who really won … the constitution doesn’t allow it but now maybe the constitution doesn’t matter at all,” said Freddy, 26, an industrial engineering student.

In the capital, protesters were blocked from the presidential residence by soldiers. Demonstrators carrying white flowers to signify peace marched to the vote-counting centre (Infop) singing pro-Nasralla and anti-Hernández songs.

Watched by rows of navy, army and police officers carrying riot shields, Nasralla climbed on to a truck to read to the crowd a letter that was delivered to the TSE, rejecting its latest decision.

From the country’s second city, San Pedro Sula, Jesuit human rights leader Ismael Moreno, known as Padre Melo, told the Guardian the TSE decision could lead to mayhem.

“Unless there is a tally by tally count, any announcement by the TSE will not be credible,” he said. “If Juan Orlando Hernández is declared the president-elect in these conditions, the situation will get out if control.”

Eight deaths have been linked to election unrest reported by local media. Scores more are feared to have been injured and detained.

On Saturday night, the deafening sound of households banging on pots and pans blared out across Tegucigalpa, as part of an organised act of defiance against a curfew which the president says was requested by business and church groups worried about looting.

The government has ordered security forces to arrest anyone breaching the 6pm to 6am curfew, including journalists, and suspended constitutional rights for 10 days. The opposition and human rights groups say peaceful protests may have been infiltrated by criminals and government-aligned provocateurs.

Civil liberty lawyers are preparing to challenge the legality of the curfew – which was signed by the vice-president, not the president – in the supreme court. The judiciary, like congress and the armed forces, is controlled by the National party.