Thousands in anti-corruption march against Honduras president
TEGUCIGALPA, Honduras (AFP) — Tens of thousands of Hondurans marched on Friday in Tegucigalpa, many with torches in hand, as they demanded the resignation of President Juan Orlando Hernandez over an ongoing corruption scandal.
The crowd, which organisers estimated to number around 50,000 people, sounded horns and carried candle-lit torches, demanding the creation of an anti-corruption commission and rejecting dialogue with the president.
Many of the protesters carried banners and held anti-government signs with slogans, such as “Honduras
is ours” and “This is no president, he’s a criminal.”
The protesters crowded onto the city’s Suyapa Boulevard for more than a kilometre, marching to the presidential palace which
was guarded by police and soldiers.
The demonstration marked the fifth Friday in which protesters have hit the streets calling for Hernandez to go.
The Opposition charge that the president received about US$90 million out of more than US$300 million they say was skimmed from poverty-wracked Honduras’s public health system for his 2013 election campaign.
Hernandez has denied wrongdoing and drastically played down the amount.
On Tuesday last, the president called for a dialogue on forming an organisation to combat corruption and impunity, but the protesters have rejected the proposal.
Hernandez was not in the country for the march, but was instead in Guatemala for a meeting of Central American leaders.