NOVANEWS
Opposition candidate Salvador Nasralla has accused the government of committing a major fraud and “whitewashing” of a corrupt electoral process.
The Supreme Electoral Tribunal of Honduras or TSE has officially declared that lawyer and incumbent President Juan Orlando Hernandez has won the country’s scandal-plagued presidential elections which resulted in weeks of unrest and accusations of fraud by the country’s broad leftist popular forces who united behind contender Salvador Nasralla.
According to the TSE’s official ballot count, Hernandez won the Nov. 26 elections with 1,410,888 votes amounting to 42.95 percent of total ballots cast, narrowly beating Nasralla by a razor-thin margin of 1.53 percentage points.
Hernandez, a 49-year-old lawyer with middle-class social roots, has a “law and order” reputation for having spearheaded a harsh crackdown on drug cartels and criminal gangs during his first term in office.
While Nasralla, a 64-year-old journalist and businessman, is one of Honduras’ best-known faces and was backed by former President Manuel Zelaya, a leftist ousted in a Washington-backed coup in 2009.
Amid the controversial declaration of victory, head of the Electoral Observation Mission of the Organization of American States (EOM/OAS) in Honduras and former Bolivian President Jorge “Tuto” Quiroga said, in a presser, that a number of unexplained discrepancies were found in the electoral process.
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