Police officers belonging to the COBRA Special Riot Command at their unit's headquarters, where they are refusing to go out on the streets and crack down on demonstrators in Tegucigalpa on December 4, 2017. 
Honduran electoral authorities concluded a recount early Monday, more than a week after a bitterly contested presidential election that put President Juan Orlando Hernandez in the lead, but they held back from officially declaring him the winner. The police are refusing to crack down on supporters of the candidate for the Opposition Alliance against the Dictatorship, Salvador Nasralla, who refuse to recognise the results announced by the electoral authorities.  / AFP PHOTO / JOHAN ORDONEZ        (Photo credit should read JOHAN ORDONEZ/AFP/Getty Images)
Hondurans applaud and cheer the arrival of police officers belonging to the COBRA Special Riot Command at their unit's headquarters, where they are refusing to go out on the streets and crack down on demonstrators in Tegucigalpa on December 4, 2017. 
Honduran electoral authorities concluded a recount early Monday, more than a week after a bitterly contested presidential election that put President Juan Orlando Hernandez in the lead, but they held back from officially declaring him the winner. The police are refusing to crack down on supporters of the candidate for the Opposition Alliance against the Dictatorship, Salvador Nasralla, who refuse to recognise the results announced by the electoral authorities.   / AFP PHOTO / JOHAN ORDONEZ        (Photo credit should read JOHAN ORDONEZ/AFP/Getty Images)
Police officers belonging to the COBRA Special Riot Command at their unit's headquarters, where they are refusing to go out on the streets and crack down on demonstrators in Tegucigalpa on December 4, 2017. 
Honduran electoral authorities concluded a recount early Monday, more than a week after a bitterly contested presidential election that put President Juan Orlando Hernandez in the lead, but they held back from officially declaring him the winner. The police are refusing to crack down on supporters of the candidate for the Opposition Alliance against the Dictatorship, Salvador Nasralla, who refuse to recognise the results announced by the electoral authorities.  / AFP PHOTO / JOHAN ORDONEZ        (Photo credit should read JOHAN ORDONEZ/AFP/Getty Images)
Hondurans applaud and cheer the arrival of police officers belonging to the COBRA Special Riot Command at their unit's headquarters, where they are refusing to go out on the streets and crack down on demonstrators in Tegucigalpa on December 4, 2017. 
Honduran electoral authorities concluded a recount early Monday, more than a week after a bitterly contested presidential election that put President Juan Orlando Hernandez in the lead, but they held back from officially declaring him the winner. The police are refusing to crack down on supporters of the candidate for the Opposition Alliance against the Dictatorship, Salvador Nasralla, who refuse to recognise the results announced by the electoral authorities.   / AFP PHOTO / JOHAN ORDONEZ        (Photo credit should read JOHAN ORDONEZ/AFP/Getty Images)
Hondurans applaud and cheer the arrival of police officers belonging to the COBRA Special Riot Command at their unit's headquarters, where they are refusing to go out on the streets and crack down on demonstrators in Tegucigalpa on December 4, 2017. 
Honduran electoral authorities concluded a recount early Monday, more than a week after a bitterly contested presidential election that put President Juan Orlando Hernandez in the lead, but they held back from officially declaring him the winner. The police are refusing to crack down on supporters of the candidate for the Opposition Alliance against the Dictatorship, Salvador Nasralla, who refuse to recognise the results announced by the electoral authorities.   / AFP PHOTO / JOHAN ORDONEZ        (Photo credit should read JOHAN ORDONEZ/AFP/Getty Images)