Supporters of Salvador Nasralla, presidential candidate for the Opposition Alliance Against the Dictatorship, raise their fists as they sing the national anthem, while waiting for official presidential election results outside the warehouse of the Supreme Electoral Tribunal in Tegucigalpa, Honduras November 29, 2017. REUTERS/Jorge Cabrera Reuters
New York Times: Political Unrest Grips Honduras After Disputed Election
MEXICO CITY — Honduras was on the edge of political turmoil on Thursday, with the opposition candidate accusing vote counters of trying to “steal our victory” in an election whose results are sharply contested.
The candidate, Salvador Nasralla, said Wednesday that he would not accept the count of the country’s electoral commission, whose computer tally showed that President Juan Orlando Hernández had closed a gap that initially put Mr. Nasralla ahead in the voting that ended Sunday.
Mr. Nasralla’s statement that he would not accept the count represented an about-face from a letter he had signed a few hours earlier along with Mr. Hernández. Brokered by the Organization of American States, the agreement committed both men to respecting the commission’s results.
With ballots counted at about 80 percent of polling places, the candidates’ vote totals were almost even when Mr. Nasralla backtracked on the agreement. A final result is expected on Thursday.
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WNU Editor: I guess someone gave him a heads-up that a fix may be in .... Honduras election: Opposition candidate Nasralla rejects poll count (BBC).
More News On The Political Unrest In Honduras
The Latest: Honduras: Vote computers failed, 'not critical' -- Washington Post/AP
Honduras president edges into lead, vote count delayed again -- AP
Honduran election crisis festers as rivals claim victory -- Reuters
Tensions rise as winner of Honduras vote expected Thursday -- UPI
Rising Tension In Honduras As Presidential Vote Count Drags On -- NPR
Honduras election: Tensions high as vote count delayed -- Al Jazeera
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