Donald Trump has announced that he will grant a full pardon to Juan Orlando Hernández, the former Honduran president currently serving a 45-year prison sentence in the US on drug trafficking and weapons charges. The decision comes despite Trump's reputation as being tough on combating drug problems.
Hernández was convicted in US courts of accepting millions of dollars in bribes from traffickers he once claimed to combat. During his trial, assistant US attorney Jacob Gutwillig described Hernández as having "paved a cocaine superhighway to the United States." The former president has maintained that his conviction is wrongful.
Trump's pardon for Hernández raises eyebrows given his own administration's efforts to tackle drug trafficking and crime in Central America during his presidency. In 2018, Trump designated multiple drug cartels as "foreign terrorist organizations" and ordered airstrikes on vessels across the Caribbean and Pacific. These strikes have been condemned by the UN and other humanitarian organizations as extrajudicial executions.
The pardon is also seen as a surprise given Hernández's close ties with Washington during his presidency. His administration forged a strong partnership with the US, including a close relationship between Honduras' leader at the time and the Trump administration.
This decision comes ahead of upcoming elections in Honduras, where two candidates are vying for the presidency: Tito Asfura and Rixi Moncada. The Organization of American States has expressed concerns about Honduras' electoral process, and Washington is closely monitoring the election.
Trump's message backing Asfura for Honduras' presidency also suggests that the US will continue to support the country under his leadership, but warned that if a wrong leader wins, "the United States will not be throwing good money after bad."
Hernández was convicted in US courts of accepting millions of dollars in bribes from traffickers he once claimed to combat. During his trial, assistant US attorney Jacob Gutwillig described Hernández as having "paved a cocaine superhighway to the United States." The former president has maintained that his conviction is wrongful.
Trump's pardon for Hernández raises eyebrows given his own administration's efforts to tackle drug trafficking and crime in Central America during his presidency. In 2018, Trump designated multiple drug cartels as "foreign terrorist organizations" and ordered airstrikes on vessels across the Caribbean and Pacific. These strikes have been condemned by the UN and other humanitarian organizations as extrajudicial executions.
The pardon is also seen as a surprise given Hernández's close ties with Washington during his presidency. His administration forged a strong partnership with the US, including a close relationship between Honduras' leader at the time and the Trump administration.
This decision comes ahead of upcoming elections in Honduras, where two candidates are vying for the presidency: Tito Asfura and Rixi Moncada. The Organization of American States has expressed concerns about Honduras' electoral process, and Washington is closely monitoring the election.
Trump's message backing Asfura for Honduras' presidency also suggests that the US will continue to support the country under his leadership, but warned that if a wrong leader wins, "the United States will not be throwing good money after bad."