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Protests against president Hernandez are building

Honduras reaches deal with striking truckers, but protests persist

On Thursday, Honduran authorities reached a deal with striking truckers, whose protests had caused disruptive fuel shortages, but demonstrations against president Juan Orlando Hernandez persisted in the capital.

There was widespread unrest on Wednesday evening in Tegucigalpa, including looting, after members of a Honduran riot police tasked with keeping order withdrew to their quarters to pressure the government for improved benefits.

“We’ve just finished a long but productive meeting with representatives from the cargo transport sector, and agreements have been reached on their principal demands,” Hernandez said in comments broadcast on local television.

Trucking companies have been striking for an increase in what they can charge for moving freight since Monday. Protests against Hernandez, an ally of the United States, have been building in recent weeks over planned reforms that his critics argue will lead to privatisation of public health and education services in the Central American country.

Unrest continued on Thursday and military police evicted protesters who had set up barricades and burnt tyres on a southern access road to the capital, said security ministry spokesman Jair Meza.

According to euronews.com, Meza added there were ongoing roadblocks in the southern region of Choluteca and in Colon on the Atlantic Coast, where containers from a unit of the U.S. Dole Food Company were attacked a few weeks ago.

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