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Honduran President Target of US Drug Investigation, Court Filings Reveal

Honduran President Juan Orlando Hernandez has been accused of participating in the country’s narcotics trade. Honduras is a main drug route to the US, according to reports, as drug smuggling across the country is said to have increased after the US suspended anti-drug support following a 2009 Honduran coup d'état.
Sputnik

US prosecutors are currently investigating Honduras President Juan Orlando Hernandez for alleged participation in the country’s narcotics trade, according to a new court document filed Friday night in the Southern District of New York. 

According to Reuters, the document was filed in the case of Geovanny Fuentes Ramirez, an alleged Honduran drug-trafficker who, along with other  “high-ranking officials,” is the target of an investigation related to drug-trafficking.

The filing did not outline, however, what Hernandez is being investigated for. 

Last month, US federal prosecutors filed motions accusing Hernandez of taking bribes from drug traffickers, accusing the president of having “accepted millions of dollars in drug-trafficking proceeds and, in exchange, promised drug traffickers protection from prosecutors, law enforcement, and (later) extradition to the United States,” Reuters reported.

Prosecutors have also stated that the Honduras government has “hardly been forthcoming” in investigations against Hernandez. 

US prosecutors have accused the Honduran government of handing over “limited records” and not honoring extradition requests for witnesses against the president.

Hernandez, a key US ally, has denied any links to profiting off of the drug cartels.

Previous court records show that the US Drug Enforcement Agency began investigating Hernandez on drug trafficking and money laundering charges, Al-Jazeera reported.

According to Reuters, the recent investigation into Hernandez could deteriorate ties between the Honduran government and the Biden administration, which is planning to invest $4 billion in Central America to deal with root causes of migration. 

“As president, Joe Biden will renew a robust commitment to US leadership in the region and pursue a comprehensive strategy for Central America by developing a comprehensive four-year, $4 billion regional strategy to address factors driving migration from Central America,” explains the JoeBiden.com website.

The US State Department outlines that Honduras “suffers from high levels of crime and violence nationwide” and is a “transit country for drugs, primarily cocaine, destined for the United States.”

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