Accessibility links

Breaking News

Hondurans Call for President to Step Down After Drug Verdict 


A demonstrator throws a plastic bag with white powder during a protest against the government of President Juan Orlando Hernandez, whose brother was found guilty of U.S. drug trafficking charges, in Tegucigalpa, Oct. 18, 2019.
A demonstrator throws a plastic bag with white powder during a protest against the government of President Juan Orlando Hernandez, whose brother was found guilty of U.S. drug trafficking charges, in Tegucigalpa, Oct. 18, 2019.

Opposition groups called Saturday for continuing protests to demand that Honduran President Juan Orlando Hernandez be removed from office after his younger brother was convicted of drug trafficking in a New York court.

Thousands of Hondurans protested into the early hours of the morning after Juan Antonio ``Tony'' Hernandez was convicted Friday in what U.S. prosecutors described as a conspiracy that relied on ``state-sponsored drug trafficking.''

Protesters blocked key roads in half of the country's 18 provinces, setting barricades ablaze, while some took advantage of the disturbances to loot stores. Police had not reported any arrests and urged protesters to express their concerns ``peacefully without affecting the right of others.''

President Hernandez insisted via Twitter that the verdict was not against the state of Honduras, saying his government had fought drug trafficking. On Saturday he attended a parade to honor the country's armed forces and posted pictures of himself on Twitter smiling alongside the U.S. charge d'affaires to Honduras, Colleen Hoey.

With Hoey at the parade, Hernandez said he discussed ways to strengthen ties between the two countries while also fighting drug trafficking and organized crime.

The president has accused Honduran drug traffickers extradited to the U.S. of retaliating against his family by alleging that his younger brother is a drug dealer aided by the government.

Hernandez assumed a second four-year term as president in January 2018, despite a constitutional ban on re-election.

Convicted drug dealers asserted during the U.S. trial against his brother that they contributed to both of Hernandez's campaigns for president on promises that he would protect their businesses and them while in office.

A son of Honduras' previous president, Porfirio Lobo, admitted in 2017 to being part of a cocaine-trafficking network and was sentenced to 24 years of prison in the U.S.

XS
SM
MD
LG