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This
time, instead of walking, organizers decided to drive their cars in a
caravan, to avoid confrontation or repression that they feared by the
State security forces. Hundreds of cars and people drove through the
streets honking their horns, with flags, horns and music. Both those in
the caravan and people yelling support from the streets, "I didn't
vote!" showed their ink-less fingers, to show they had not been
registered at a polling station where a finger print as part of your id
is normally taken.
Though the media is reporting record high turnouts for Sunday's election, no one is buying it. One woman I interviewed who didn't want to be identified because of fear ("if they see my picture, they [the military] will come after me"), said, "I have over 150 people in my [extended] family and not one went out to vote."
On election day at , the TSE announced that they were having a large turnout and didn't have enough paper and ink so were going to extend voting by an hour. Others suggest that they extended the voting hour precisely because there wasn't a large turnout and there are reports that police started going into neighbors’ houses announcing that all citizens must vote. Despite this, many didn't. One taxi driver I asked from Tocoa, in the department of
This driver had reason to be nervous. Five members of our delegation were in Tocoa the day before the election and we saw at least five unmarked trucks and SUVs with tinted windows driving through the small town, reminding those on the streets they were being watched. Some didn't even bother taking the National Party banner off the vehicles as they drove past folks walking on the streets or pulling up in front of the homes of resistance leaders homes.
When our delegation met with the Sub-Chief at the National Police Station in Tocoa on election day, after receiving a call that up to eight people had been illegally detained, he said that the police were, "doing all they could to ensure the safety of citizens." He noted that the police register any unmarked cars they see to ensure they do not have dangerous materials inside and that they are registered to the right people driving the car. When I asked why the police hadn't stopped the unmarked vehicles we saw, despite the fact that every other car was being stopped and registered at the police check point, he simply didn't answer. Later that night, a pipe bomb exploded in the Liberal Party Headquarters in Tocoa and the eight missing still have not been found or the story cleared about their whereabouts.
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Of
the over 800 families living in the community, they suspect only a
handful went to vote. The campesinos in this community know this will
be a long battle, but one man, Augustin, age 75, said proudly, "I have
seen a lot in my life time. We continue the struggle because it is part
of who we are, we are conscious and we believe in the struggle."
In
other polling stations, we saw political hype but not too many voters.
In Corosito, Colon, we visited the polls with members of the
Coordination of Popular Organizations of Aguan (COPA) and saw many
empty rooms in the school where the poll had been set up. Military and
police guarded the door, the first time for this kind of security
during a civilian election. In other parts of the country, including
San Pedro Sula where people in resistance had planned a peaceful march
to show opposition to the election process, tear gas and water bombs
served to control the crowds.
One issue isn't in question: the strength and courage of the Honduran people. As the caravan ended tonight in front of the Brazilian Embassy, in an act of solidarity with President Zelaya held captive inside, chanting, singing and dancing (there was even a Mariachi band!) could be seen and heard while the police and military called in reinforcements and pointed their 50 mm machine gun at the celebrating crowd. So when it was time, people left - peacefully, just as the caravan had started. They weren't about to enter a conflict with the military, a physical fight is not what they want.
When I asked a young woman in the crowd why she was there, what she wanted, she didn't surprise me with her answer, "la constituyente" – the constituent assembly that many believe could one day lead to real change in Honduras. Until then the people keep singing, "The People, United, Will Never Be Defeated!". Just as the graffiti says throughout Honduras, "The Power Is In The Streets."

