Top Story · Politics
Rights Commission Summons Honduras Over Political Trials
The Inter-American Commission on Human Rights has set a public hearing for August 5 in Washington to examine whether Honduras's political-trial process, used against former prosecutor Johel Zelaya and two other officials, meets international standards for judicial independence and due process.
Politics
Honduras Sends Officials to Spain for Migration-Intelligence Training
Three Honduran officials will train at Spain's National Police Academy under the EU-backed EUROFRONT program to sharpen migration intelligence and border management.
Radio Cadena Voces (RCV)Read in EnglishLeer en EspañolImmigrationHonduras Reopens Residency Stamp for Foreign-Born Children of Hondurans
The National Migration Institute has revived a temporary legal-residency permit for the foreign-born children of Honduran parents, letting them stay in the country legally until age 21 for a 200-lempira fee (about $8).
TelevicentroRead in EnglishLeer en EspañolImmigrationCongress Rewrites Laws After Passage Through Procedural Workarounds
Lawmakers have altered the text of at least three laws already on the books through parliamentary reconsiderations and amendments to session records—a practice legal analysts say violates the Legislative Organic Law and echoes a 2018 corruption case.
Criterio.hnRead in EnglishLeer en Español
Business
Power Outages Cost Honduras L1.2 Billion a Year
The private-sector business council estimates that power outages—averaging 21,200 hours of unmet demand a year—cost Honduras about L1.2 billion (roughly $48 million) annually in lost productivity, equipment damage, and generator expenses, even as the government pushes stalled reforms to shore up the state electricity utility.
Diario RoatánRead in EnglishLeer en EspañolEconomyFood-Basket Prices Rise 6% as Hunger Risk Grows
The cost of Honduras's basic food basket rose 800 lempiras (about $32) in a year, a 6.16% jump driven by pricier meat and fruit, while drought across 75 municipalities threatens to push 2.8 million Hondurans into food insecurity by year's end.
Radio HRNRead in EnglishLeer en EspañolEconomyAlso reported by: Radio América, Radio América Honduras
More Than 3.1 Million Hondurans Received Remittances in 2025
Family remittances to Honduras reached $11.9 billion in 2025, reaching 3.1 million recipients and accounting for 30% of GDP, though growth is slowing from 2024.
El HeraldoRead in EnglishLeer en EspañolEconomyHonduras Tightens Pork Import Rules, Bans Fresh Meat
Agriculture authorities will admit only processed pork products from disease-free zones in Spain, keeping a ban on fresh pork imports to protect domestic producers and guard against disease.
Diario RoatánRead in EnglishLeer en EspañolEconomyCentral Bank Auctions $98.5 Million in Foreign Exchange
The Central Bank of Honduras sold $98.5 million at its July 7 currency auction, setting the weighted average exchange rate at L26.7474 per dollar for July 8.
Banco Central de Honduras (X)Read on XEconomyLempira Slips Past 26.87 to the Dollar as Living Costs Climb
The Honduran lempira has weakened to more than 26.87 per dollar on the selling side, and economists and civil groups warn the slide is fueling inflation and driving up the cost of living.
Radio HRNRead on XEconomyHonduras Leads Central America in Export Growth
The Inter-American Development Bank ranked Honduras among the region's fastest-growing exporters in early 2026, led by coffee, apparel, bananas, and palm oil, while warning of risks from market volatility and rising costs.
Infobae – HondurasRead in EnglishLeer en EspañolEconomyHonduras Faces Fiscal Test in Meeting IMF Targets
Honduras is under pressure to hit the 1% fiscal-deficit target in its International Monetary Fund agreement, with economists warning that holding the line will be one of its toughest tasks in keeping the IMF's confidence and safeguarding its economic credibility.
Radio Cadena Voces (X)Read on XEconomy
Infrastructure
ENEE Schedules Thursday Power Cuts Across Four Departments
The national utility ENEE will cut power on July 9 in parts of Colón, Cortés, El Paraíso, and Olancho for seven to nine hours of distribution-network maintenance, affecting residential, commercial, industrial, and rural areas.
El HeraldoRead in EnglishLeer en EspañolHalf of Germania Bridge to Close Tonight
Infrastructure Minister Aníbal Ehrler said half of the Germania Bridge on Tegucigalpa's southern exit will close tonight.
Radio América HondurasRead on XTegucigalpaENEE Rescue Reforms Still Miss Key Pieces, Analyst Says
Edgar Aguilar of the Association for a More Just Society (ASJ) says the proposed reforms to rescue the state power company ENEE lack fundamental elements, while the ASJ has separately offered its own plans to restructure ENEE's debt and ease its financial burden.
Radio Cadena Voces (X)Read on XNearly 5 Km of Road to Be Paved in Santa Bárbara
The infrastructure ministry announced the paving of a nearly five-kilometer stretch between Tencoa and El Jilote in Santa Bárbara department.
SIT — Secretaría de Infraestructura y Transporte (X)Read on XSanta Bárbara
Health
Whooping Cough Has Killed 15 Infants in Honduras
Honduras has recorded 15 infant deaths from whooping cough so far in 2026, health authorities said.
Radio AméricaRead in EnglishLeer en EspañolAlso reported by: Radio Cadena Voces (X), Radio América Honduras
Food Crisis Could Hit 1.8 Million Hondurans by July
An integrated food-security analysis warns that acute food insecurity in Honduras could deepen to 1.8 million people (18% of the population analyzed) between April and July 2026, driven by erratic rains, high grain prices, and depleted household reserves.
TuNota (Canal 5 / TSI)Read in EnglishLeer en EspañolHonduras Dengue Cases Top 5,000; First Death Reported
Honduras has logged more than 5,000 dengue cases so far in 2026, including one confirmed death, according to the health authority's surveillance chief, prompting new public-health alerts.
Radio AméricaRead in EnglishLeer en EspañolAlso reported by: Radio Cadena Voces (X)
More Than 1,000 Girls Aged 9–14 Get Pregnant Each Year in Honduras
More than 1,000 girls aged 9 to 14 become pregnant each year in Honduras, a crisis the women's rights ombudsman blames on the lack of comprehensive sex education that leaves adolescents open to abuse and exploitation.
Radio América HondurasRead on X
Environment
Groups Fight Redrawing of El Merendón Forest Reserve
Civil-society groups and lawmakers in Cortés are challenging the Forestry Conservation Institute's plan to redraw the boundaries of the El Merendón protected forest reserve, arguing it would benefit private real-estate projects even though the reserve supplies 80% of San Pedro Sula's water and is vital to regional biodiversity.
ContracorrienteRead in EnglishLeer en EspañolSan Pedro Sula
Crime
US Anti-Drug Task Force Chief Visits Honduras for Security Talks
Jeffrey K. Randall, commander of the US military's Joint Interagency Task Force South, arrived in Honduras to meet President Nasry Asfura and defense officials and review cooperation against drug trafficking and transnational organized crime.
La PrensaRead in EnglishLeer en EspañolSecurityFamily Demands Answers in Angie Peña Case After 4.5 Years
The family of Angie Samantha Peña Melgares, missing for four and a half years, says the investigation points to a transnational human-trafficking network operating in the Bay Islands and accuses authorities of delays and irregularities in the case.
Radio Cadena Voces (RCV)Read in EnglishLeer en EspañolSecurityHonduran Woman Found Dead in Mexico
Estefany Guevara Varela, 26, of Santa Ana de Yusguare in Choluteca, was found dead in Mexico with a shotgun wound; her family awaits autopsy results and is trying to raise $3,300 to bring her body home for burial.
La PrensaRead in EnglishLeer en EspañolSecurity · CholutecaAlso reported by: Once Noticias, HCH
Femicides Rarely End in Convictions in Honduras
From 2019 to 2025, Honduras officially recorded 2,278 femicides, but courts have prosecuted only about 150 of them, leaving families like that of 18-year-old Cinthia Melissa Hernández—found buried in her home after her partner fled—wrestling with despair and distrust of the justice system.
Criterio.hnRead in EnglishLeer en EspañolSecurity · Tegucigalpa