Home News Honduras seeks justice at home, without the help of extradition

Honduras seeks justice at home, without the help of extradition

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Delio Colindres, a fruit vendor, was passing near ex-President Juan Orlando Hernández’s house on Feb.15, when he noticed a heavy police presence. It wasn’t long before Mr. Hernández was brought out in handcuffs. 

Citizens may have celebrated as their former leader was taken away, just one day after the United States requested his extradition on drug and weapons charges. But the situation – which has played out in a variety of ways across the region since the 1970s – is bittersweet. Today, many in Honduras are imagining a different possibility: justice for high-profile criminals within Honduran borders.

Why We Wrote This

Do the arrests of high-profile politicians or kingpins in Latin America and their extradition to the U.S. actually help their home countries? In Honduras, many hope their new government can deliver justice in their own courts.

“Honduras should have robust internal institutions, and the heads of these institutions should be selected for … professional merits, so that when they have the opportunity to investigate anyone – regardless of their position – they do so without hesitation,” says Ana Pineda, professor of law at the National Autonomous University of Honduras. 

That shift may be underway. For the first time in 12 years, a new party is in power, pledging to deliver justice for corrupt officials, bring back an international anti-corruption committee, and revive Honduras’ weakened democracy through a constituent assembly. 

“It’s not that difficult if there is political will,” says Ms. Pineda. “And this government has shown that it wants to do things differently.”

TEGUCIGALPA, Honduras; and Mexico City

Belkis Galindo raced outside to dance and sing alongside hundreds in the Honduran capital on Feb. 15, marking the arrest of former President Juan Orlando Hernández.

“We were all waiting for it,” says Ms. Galindo, who works in marketing. Mr. Hernández, who served eight years as president and oversaw a period of increased poverty, violence, and international migration, was taken into custody by Honduran police the day after the United States requested his extradition for drug trafficking and weapons charges.

We’re “just waiting for the day when they actually send him [to the U.S.]. There will be more justice there than here,” says Ms. Galindo.

Why We Wrote This

Do the arrests of high-profile politicians or kingpins in Latin America and their extradition to the U.S. actually help their home countries? In Honduras, many hope their new government can deliver justice in their own courts.

Despite the celebrations, this moment is bittersweet. Extradition is a tool that’s been used in the region by the U.S. since the 1970s to take often “untouchable” politicians and drug traffickers and try them in a system that’s less susceptible to the local threats, bribes, and political maneuvering back home. But with Mr. Hernández’s extradition on the table, many in Honduras are imagining a different possibility: justice for high-profile criminals within Honduran borders.

“Honduras is worthy of a better fate [than extradition],” says Ana Pineda, professor of law at the National Autonomous University of Honduras (UNAH) and former secretary of justice and human rights. “Honduras should have robust internal institutions, and the heads of these institutions should be selected for … professional merits so that when they have the opportunity to investigate anyone – regardless of their position – they do so without hesitation.”



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