Castro to call mass protests over Honduras vote 'theft'

Castro to call mass protests over Honduras vote 'theft'

Tegucigalpa (AFP) - Honduras's leftist presidential candidate Xiomara Castro will call massive street protests over what her campaign slammed as the theft of the country's presidential vote.

"On Saturday, we are going to summon people to protest. The Libre (Party) and Xiomara (Castro) have been robbed of their victory, and we are going to show it," her husband, ousted ex-president Manuel Zelaya, told Radio and TV Globo.

The country's Supreme Electoral Tribunal has not declared an official winner in Sunday's vote.

But it has indicated that conservative Juan Orlando Hernandez has an irreversible lead of 35.88 percent over Castro, at 29.14 percent, with 81.5 percent of the polling stations reporting.

"For now, we do not recognize the results" that have been given, Zelaya said, insisting that they had been "manipulated, and we are going to prove it."

Castro and her husband allege that the Supreme Electoral Tribunal manipulated 19 percent of the votes to favor Hernandez.

European Union and Organization of American States observers called the voting process transparent and non-problematic.

"We will defend the will of the people as it was expressed at the polls," Castro wrote in a Twitter posting late Tuesday.

Zelaya, meanwhile, said in a post that "we will confirm our victory."

A civil society group GSC issued a plea for electoral authorities to "answer to the fraud charges immediately."

Tensions were running high as the political standoff again spread to the streets with protests by students.

"No to fraud!" they shouted during a demonstration in support of Castro outside the gates of a university east of Tegucigalpa.

On Tuesday, about 100 police in helmets and riot gear used tear gas and then truncheons to beat 800 pro-Castro protesters and send them scrambling.

Hernandez is a law-and-order conservative who has promised a militarized program to improve public safety in the nation with the world's highest murder rate, which is also among the poorest in Latin America.

Gangs run whole neighborhoods, extorting businesses as large as factories and as small as tortilla stands, while drug cartels use Honduras as a transfer point for shipping illegal drugs, especially cocaine, from South America to the United States.

The clash between Hernandez, of the National Party, and Castro, of the Libre party, brought new uncertainty to a deeply troubled country, also reeling from the wounds of the coup just four years ago.

Hernandez, who is also speaker of the legislature, said the people have spoken at the ballot box.

The governments of Colombia, Guatemala, Panama and Costa Rica congratulated Hernandez. Nicaragua's leftist President Daniel Ortega also recognized Hernandez as the winner.

The election's winner will inherit a country of 8.5 million people with 71 percent of the population living in poverty and a soaring homicide rate of 20 murders per day.

Castro, who proposes "Honduran-style democratic socialism," wants to rewrite the constitution and "re-found" the country -- a move similar to the one that led to the coup that ousted her husband in 2009.

Zelaya was elected Honduran president as a PL candidate in 2005.

But when he moved to the political left and tried to reform the constitution, the military abruptly deposed him with support from Congress and the Supreme Court.