Top Story · Education
Power Cut Halts Classes at Toncontín Flight School
An aviation school at Tegucigalpa's Toncontín Airport says its electricity was cut off, stranding scholarship students, in what it calls an unlawful eviction that violates prior agreements and due process.
Politics
Congress Panel Moves to Disrupt Prison Extortion Rings
Congress's Telecommunications Commission is advancing reforms to stop inmates from running extortion schemes by cellphone, including penalties for satellite companies and prison officials who let contraband devices into the facilities.
Congreso Nacional· in SpanishSecurityHonduras Risks Losing Arbitration Cases Over Power Reforms
Former energy official Guillermo Peña Panting warns that Honduras could lose international arbitration cases brought by electricity-sector investors at ICSID, pointing to the government's overhaul of contracts signed under earlier legal frameworks.
Congress Panel Backs Tougher Penalties for Attacks on Security and Justice Officials
A congressional committee approved a bill imposing life sentences and other harsh penalties for killing or attempting to kill police, soldiers, judges, and other security and justice officials in the line of duty, sending the measure to a floor vote.
Congress and IAIP Sign Deal to Audit Electronic Voting System
Congress President Tomás Zambrano and the public-information authority (IAIP) signed an agreement Monday to oversee an upgrade of the legislature's electronic voting system, which officials say will strengthen transparency and restore credibility after Honduras's Congress ranked last in Latin American legislative evaluations.
Business
Honduras Economy Grows 3.5% Through April
Honduras's monthly index of economic activity rose 3.5% in the first four months of 2026, lifted by stronger agricultural-export sales and higher domestic consumption, the central bank reported.
Radio América HondurasEconomyUS Legal-Status Rule Threatens Honduras Remittance Flows
A former head of Honduras's banking commission warned that new US rules requiring those who send remittances to prove legal status could choke the flow of family money—which topped $12 billion in 2025 and has already passed $4.5 billion in 2026—and damage several sectors of the Honduran economy.
Radio Cadena Voces (X)Economy
Infrastructure
IDB Backs Honduras Energy Reforms
The Inter-American Development Bank said it supports Honduras's energy reforms, which aim to fix structural problems in the power system and secure its long-term sustainability, and pledged to help carry them out.
Also reported by: Radio Cadena Voces (X)
Stone Barriers Shield Ulúa River Communities From Erosion
Crews built more than 1 kilometer of stone barriers along the Ulúa River in El Progreso, Yoro, to curb erosion and protect riverbanks that serve roughly 1,700 residents in three nearby communities.
Education
91 Women Graduate From Ciudad Mujer Education Program
The Ciudad Mujer education center graduated 91 women—among them single mothers, homemakers, and working women from across Honduras—who finished secondary school through a program built for women shut out of conventional schooling.
Crime
Police Arrest MS-13 Member With 2,900 Drug Doses
National Police arrested an active MS-13 gang member in San Lorenzo, Valle, and seized more than 2,900 doses of narcotics in the operation.
Policía Nacional de HondurasSecurity · ValleTwo Men Arrested in Armed Robbery in Yoro
Police arrested two men, ages 25 and 22, on suspicion of an armed robbery against a Yoro resident, catching them as they fled the Las Colinas neighborhood shortly after the alleged assault.
Radio América HondurasSecurity · YoroPolice Arrest Suspect in Intibucá Killing
Police arrested a man wanted on a warrant in connection with the killing of Máximo Martínez in Intibucá.
Policía Nacional de HondurasSecurity · Intibucá