To
begin, much of what is happening goes back to the 2009 coup and removal of then
president Mel Zelaya. Zelaya, who had very, very close ties to Venezuela’s Hugo
Chavez and Cuba’s Fidel Castro, attempted in a non-legal fashion to run for
president a second time, which was unconstitutional. The country, fearing a
dictatorship, organized a coup and removed him from office. Zelaya continues to
maintain a strong following, especially in the southern, rural areas of the
country and among teachers. Although he is prohibited from running for
reelection, he continued and continues to attempt to return to power, first
through having his wife run for president and currently, by joining forces with presidential candidate Salvador Nasralla as the face and voice of the new Alianza Party.
Honduras is a country with multiple political parties. (at this time there exist 9 political parties) Because of this, the winning party often does not actually represent the majority of its citizens, because when votes are divided 9 ways, the winning party may only represent 30% or less of the votes. Seeing this weakness, a new party was formed called the Alianza. As it’s name suggest, it is an alliance between the pre-existing Libre party represented by ex-president Zelaya and his wife and the pre-existing PINU party represented by TV host Salvador Nasralla. The Alliance is officially represented by Nasralla.
Honduras is a country with multiple political parties. (at this time there exist 9 political parties) Because of this, the winning party often does not actually represent the majority of its citizens, because when votes are divided 9 ways, the winning party may only represent 30% or less of the votes. Seeing this weakness, a new party was formed called the Alianza. As it’s name suggest, it is an alliance between the pre-existing Libre party represented by ex-president Zelaya and his wife and the pre-existing PINU party represented by TV host Salvador Nasralla. The Alliance is officially represented by Nasralla.
The
elected president replacing Zelaya, was Perfidio Lobo. By most accounts he was
not good for Honduras. With close ties to the drug cartels and apparently
little interest in governing Honduras, most of the foreign investors, including
many of the large textile companies who employed large numbers of Hondurans, left
the country in search of countries with more stable governments. The negative
effect on Honduras’ economic well-being was devastating.
In
November of 2013, Juan Orlando Hernandez of the National Party won election. Looking at
world statistics and from the viewpoint of a foreigner living in Honduras, he
has been a president whose policies and actions have been good for
Honduras. In four years he has reduced the murder rate per capita, has worked
to control the massive drug cartel/gang problem, has encouraged
foreign investment, has greatly improved the infrastructure of Honduras, has
brought Honduras’ public schools to a higher educational level when compared with the rest
of the world, and has worked closely with the USA in many areas, including the
war on drugs. As a foreigner, I have seen the positive results of his
presidency. A much safer country, a growing middle class, a growing economy, a
reduction in government and police corruption and a rising interest in Honduras
from foreign investors who are beginning to see some signs of a return to stability. However, this is not to say that his administration has not suffered
severe issues, such as the theft of millions of lempiras from the country’s already less than adequate social security fund.
As
I have spoken with many people about the situation, most agree that Juan
Orlando has been a good president. What has fueled the anger we are seeing in
this year’s election is that Orlando, through a Supreme Court decision
which most of the country felt was done illegally or at best underhandedly,
changed the Constitution to allow a president to run for a second and possibly indefinite term. The
outcome is the same thing ex-president Zelaya tried to do through brute force
and the majority of the population feel that the change made to the
Constitution was not done correctly nor reflects the will of the People. Some of what we are seeing now, is a backlash against Orlando because of this.
That
brings us to this year’s election. (Fortunately, Honduras did invite observers from the EU and
the OAS to come in October to begin observing the electoral process.) On
November 26, Hondurans went to the polling booths.
As
the votes came in, the Alianza was initially ahead, then the National party
after a technical problem began to marginally pull ahead. By the following day
both parties claimed victory. Immediately, the Alianza party accused the
National party of voter fraud, meddling in the voting and tabulation process,
irregularities and party control of the voting process. That began a lawful 30
day review process of any allegation of fraud brought to the TSE. This is the only reason
that no winner was announced immediately.
Without
waiting for the TSE under the supervision of EU and OAS observers to review the
allegations or to recount the large number of votes that had been challenged, the Alianza supporters took
to the streets in protest fueled and encouraged by both Nasralla and Zalaya,
who, already having made the decision that they had been cheated, demanded
their candidate be made the winner. The National party felt they too had won,
and from there everything began to go downhill, naturally.
What
began as emotional and heartfelt protest by supporters of the Alianza party,
within hours turned to rioting, burning and looting of public and private
property, including the closure of public thoroughfares which greatly impacted
all of the Honduran people and the economy. The
rampant rioting and looting brought a national curfew into effect which helped
reduce the violence. Within a few days, the curfew was lifted and there began
several days of peace, although fraught with tension.
Both
EU and OAS issued statements saying that although there were “irregularities”
found in the voting process, no fraud was actually found. The EU’s statement
was much more accepting of the election results, but encouraged reform, while
the OAS, although apparently unable to actually find fraudulent behavior, went
so far as to reject the election outcome based on the irregularities and
recommended a new election be held. This did not happen and probably won’t for
a variety of reasons, not least being that the constitution of Honduras, as I
understand it, does not allow for a run-off election.
After
almost 3 weeks, the TSE officially declared Juan Orlando the
winner. This immediately restarted the protest and outrage, except this time
even more violently. For four days the rioting, burning and looting went almost
completely unchecked, especially in San Pedro Sula. The US Embassy issued a
“hold in place, hunker down” statement to all US citizens living in Honduras.
Finally, the Honduran military and National Police force were brought in to
restore law and order. Of course, and unfortunately, there were clashes between
protesters and law enforcement personnel resulting in death and injuries on
both sides.
On
Friday the 22 of December, the US Embassy issued a statement recognizing
Orlando as president while at the same time, encouraging the country to refrain
from further violence, to engage in a robust debate on electoral reforms and
for both parties to work together to restore unity to the country. Following
this statement, Nasralla conceded defeat, withdrew from his party, although
publicly stating that he "believed the USA had sided with Orlando because he is
more closely aligned with them". He then recanted his withdrawel and as of this
date claims that he will hold his own presidential inauguration in San Pedro Sula the same
day as President Orlando has his inauguration in Tegucigalpa. It will be
interesting to see if he actually does this as the legal or illegal ramifications of this would be profound. (Following the US’s recognition of
Orlando, most of the other world leaders have followed suit.)
It
is difficult to say what the final response of Nasralla and Zelaya will be. In
my opinion, they have only two realistic options to choose from. (a) To
continue to incite civil disobedience and unrest, possibly leading to civil war, or (b) to
concede defeat gracefully and to look towards a new opportunity in 4 years.
Next week should be very interesting.
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The
following opinions are mine.
I do NOT claim to be unbiased or neutral in my opinions of what has taken place. As a foreigner I am unable to vote. However, as a foreign investor, I certainly have a vested interest in the outcome.
Let
me begin by saying that, although my world view falls solidly on the
conservative, capitalistic side of the fence, I am not an Orlando supporter as
such. I do support the conservative direction in which he has steered the
country economically and applaud the advances he has made in reducing crime
and murder rates in the past 4 years. Nasralla may have made a decent president,
but his political leanings and choice of political partner makes me very wary of
him, and here I am speaking from the perspective of a foreign investor and property owner.
I
will however, comment on what I have observed this past month.
First
and foremost, I am absolutely for freedom of speech and expression. I have
observed many peaceful protest here in Honduras and the police have always
helped the protesters by directing traffic and giving them space to protest
freely. I have never, myself, seen any oppression of free speech. However, when
the recent protest turned to raw greed, vandalism, looting, rioting and destruction,
not only did I lose my respect for the civil rights “process”, but also for the
opposition leaders who openly encouraged and incited their supporters to
continue the violence and rampaging. In contrast, the National party and it’s
supporters were quiet, orderly and non-confrontational.
In
my opinion, in a democracy, which Honduras is, civil rights do not extend to
harming other’s bodies, or to infringe on their right to engage in commerce, or
the destruction of property, public or private. It is true that protest often
become violent as passions are high, and it’s a recognized and documented fact
that when this happens, it almost always leads to looting. Although some see violence as the only way for poor
people to be heard, I encourage these people to read history, where peaceful
protest by poor and oppressed people, has changed the course of nations.
In
my opinion it was wrong to begin rioting before the electoral review process
had been completed, or to begin at all for that matter. There is nothing
romantic about violence and bloodshed. There is nothing beautiful in the death
of a young person who probably doesn’t even know what he or she is actually
fighting for. More often than not, that death is for nothing more than a politician’s desire
to be in power. and not really for the perceived cause.
When discussing the election, I
have often expressed the importance that in a business sense, (and probably in a
political sense too) it is never wise to bite the hand that feeds you. (The
Alianza has already expressed a much lesser willingness to work with the USA than
the National party has shown, including the promise to remove our army base near Comayagua.) Not only is the USA Honduras' number one trade partner, but there are an estimated 250,000 legal and 450,000 illegal
Hondurans living and working within the USA who each year send millions and millions of US dollars
back to Honduras to support their families, which also hugely benefits Honduras’
economy. This does not take into account the millions of dollars the USA gives
to Honduras each year to fight the war against drugs and for social programs. Nor the thousands of teams that arrive here each year bringing medical brigades and other types of donations from clothes to support for children's homes. Should these enormous flows of funds and services be restricted or eliminated completely, it would deal a nearly crushing blow to Honduras' already fragile economy. Considering this, it seems to me that it would be wise to work with, rather than against your
best customer. (There does seem to exist here a real lack of understanding of the economic impact the election may have on
the country's economy. As a matter of fact, the inability to understand and analyze world history and current global events seems to play heavily into the population's failure to view this election in the economic light it I feel it deserves.)
Speaking of education, in my conversations with many people here, it seems that most do not actually realize that Venezuela's economy has been bankrupted at the hands of it's own government (Venezuela is a big supporter of the Alianza) nor that around the world the majority of socialist countries are struggling under the weight of inadequately funded social programs even as aggregate taxes and unemployment soar. Here, the average working class Honduran currently pays little to no personal income or property tax. The government's main source of revenue are corporate taxes, income tax on the wealthy and a national sales tax on the purchase of goods and services. Taking all this into consideration, it seems unrealistic to expect
that a third world country such as Honduras, could actually create enough wealth to pay for all
the services expected of socialism, without a solid economic base which can only be provided through strong international trade and foreign investment, which depends on a stable government that sees the value in creating and maintaining these relationships long-term.
So
can anything good come from this? Absolutely.
It’s
obvious that the people of Honduras want a change from the status quo of
politics. The same wave of change that carried Trump into office is what brought Honduras
to this point. They want a government that is less corrupt, that cares about
Honduras as a country first and foremost.
People want change and the current administration would be wise to hear
them.
I
have been saying for several years that, as Americans we have a crystal ball
with which to gaze into Honduras' future. That crystal ball is the United States of
America. Although the gap is closing rapidly due to technology, in general
Honduras is 30 - 40 years behind the US in standard of living, infrastructure development and use of technology and information. Most streets are unpaved, water and sewer treatment plants are almost non-existent. Eighties music is still popular here.
Conservative churches are still struggling to deal with issues the American
church dealt with long ago, etc. However, I believe that all of this set to change, and rapidly. I also believe that the youth are on the brink
of a cultural revolution, just like we experienced in the sixties. No, I don’t
think Honduras will have a “hippie” generation, but the youth here are tired of
seeing no opportunities unless you are born rich or can get to the US. There
is a growing middle class here that are being educated. (Ah, here we come back
to education as bringing enlightenment) These are bright kids, graduating as
engineers, technicians, nurses, and lawyers….with nowhere to practice. How
frustrating that must be for them. So look out Honduras. I only hope that a
sufficiently honorable cause will be presented to these young people. One that
will catch their attention and light the fire of passion, and not some cause that ultimately they will be disillusioned by when all they fought and died for doesn’t bring
the change they so ardently hoped for.
I
hope that this election will cause the current government to realize that it is in
their best interest to bring the change the people want. I hope that they will
recognize the urgency to rid the country of the gangs that control much of the
larger cities. I hope they will bring economic reform through an anti-corruption
agenda so that foreign investors will feel safe in bringing much needed jobs to
Honduras. I hope the US sees the importance of helping the strategic ally we have in Honduras by encouraging and rewarding foreign investment through tax incentives and other methods.
Honduras needs jobs.
I believe with all my heart that jobs solve most of society’s
problems, at least those that are not spiritually or emotionally rooted. When
people are working, providing for their families with their own hands and
seeing the rewards of hard work demonstrated through better living standards, people are more
content and less likely to cause trouble or turn to crime. Honduras
has an incredible workforce, just waiting for opportunity. My constant refrain to people who want to help Honduras is this. “Please stop bringing free things which only reduces a society to a dependent welfare state void of honor and self-respect, and instead bring jobs which allows the person to purchase
for themselves the things they need, while at the same time benefiting the overall economy of the country”. This is what Honduras wants.
This
is a great country and one I have grown to love. I pray that this nation will
honorably face the future united, and that the world will see all that Honduras
really has to offer.