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News > Latin America

Honduras: Social Forum Denounces Irregularities In Upcoming Elections

  • Worker at a polling station, Honduras, Nov. 2021

    Worker at a polling station, Honduras, Nov. 2021 | Photo: Twitter/ @criteriohn

Published 10 November 2021
Opinion

The Platform in Defense of Public Health and Education invited Hondurans to go en masse to the polls because a record-high turnover is one of the ways to avoid fraud attempts.

On Tuesday, Honduran Social Forum on External Debt and Development (FOSDEH) and other social organizations denounced the existence of irregularities in the Nov. 28 elections.

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So far, the National Election Council (CNE) has not approved several important reforms for the proper conduct of transparent elections. Among them is the implementation of a second round in case no candidate reaches an absolute majority. Nor have the authorities provided citizens with the opportunity to test the new biometric equipment that will be used.

The Platform in Defense of Public Health and Education invited Hondurans to go en masse to the polls because a record-high turnover is one of the ways to avoid fraud attempts.

Civil society activists warned that President Juan Hernandez has been fostering a "political disengagement culture." In the different elections held since 2005, the average abstention rate has been 40 percent; on this occasion, however, it could reach over 50 percent.

The legitimacy of the upcoming elections is also at risk given that there are 16 percent fewer voters compared to those registered for the 2017 presidential election. This is so because the Hernandez administration removed over 1 million voters from the electoral rolls.

“Abstentionism is the single biggest threat to Honduran democracy,” United Nations Resident Coordinator in Honduras Alice Shackelford said, adding that “campaigns need to respect human dignity and human rights, avoiding hate speech and slander, disinformation and incitement to violence.”

In Nov. 28, over 5 million hondurans are summoned to elect a new president, 128 lawmakers, 298 mayors, and 20 representatives for the Centroamerican Parliament. 

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