US demands extradition: Ex-President of Honduras surrenders to the police

US demands extradition
Ex-President of Honduras surrenders to the police

Just a few weeks after the end of his term in office, an arrest warrant was issued for Juan Orlando Hernández. Now the ex-president of Honduras, who is wanted by the USA for alleged drug trafficking, is surrendering to the police. The arrest is publicly celebrated in several cities.

Former Honduran President Juan Orlando Hernandez, wanted by the United States for alleged involvement in the drug trade, has turned himself in to the police. Wearing a bulletproof vest and handcuffs, he was taken from his home in Tegucigalpa by police officers on Tuesday (local time). Earlier, a judge issued an arrest warrant for Hernández after the US requested his extradition.

The 53-year-old is accused by the US government of being involved in the smuggling of 500 tons of cocaine through the Central American state of Honduras. Drug dealers arrested in the United States had testified that they had paid bribes to close confidants of the previous head of state. An alleged accomplice of Hernández was sentenced to life in prison and fined around $151 million (€133 million) in the United States last week for cocaine smuggling. The ex-president’s brother, former Honduran MP Tony Hernández, was sentenced to life imprisonment in the United States in March 2021 for drug trafficking.

At the trial, US prosecutors said the then-president received millions of dollars in bribes from drug traffickers including former Mexico Sinaloa cartel boss Joaquín “El Chapo” Guzmán. Ex-President Hernández was described in the trial as a “co-conspirator” of his brother. Hernández’s alleged role in smuggling drugs into the United States was also raised in two other US lawsuits against Honduran drug traffickers.

Citizens celebrate Hernández’s arrest

Hernández left office late last month. The 53-year-old denies the allegations and describes them as part of a revenge plan by drug lords against which his government has taken action.

The ex-president’s lawyers insist that Hernández enjoys immunity as a member of the Central American Parliament. However, according to national regulations, Honduran members of the international parliament do not enjoy protection from criminal prosecution.

Dozens of people celebrated his forthcoming extradition in front of Hernández’s house on Tuesday. There were also spontaneous demonstrations in other cities celebrating the ex-president’s arrest.

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