Opposition calls for re-run of disputed Honduras vote
TEGUCIGALPA, Honduras — The main opposition candidate called Saturday for Honduras’ disputed presidential election to be held again after the country erupted in deadly protests over the delayed vote count and the government imposed a dawn-to-dusk curfew.
Both incumbent President Juan Orlando Hernandez and his rival, television personality Salvador Nasralla, have claimed victory in last Sunday’s vote, which the opposition says was filled with irregularities. Clashes between protesters and troops have left at least one person — and perhaps as many as a half-dozen — dead.
“I have asked them to repeat the elections, but only those for the presidency, with the aim of resolving the crisis that Honduras is suffering,” Nasralla told The Associated Press.
But he said the new election “would be under the supervision of an international electoral tribunal, not the local one, because there aren’t sufficient conditions to guarantee” the vote would be fair. Asked what response he got from the government to the proposal, Nasralla said “they haven’t responded and I don’t think they will.”