Central America
Guatemala Leads the Northern Triangle Coronavirus Death toll
In the last 10 days, the coronavirus infections have increased in all the countries that are part of the Northern Triangle. Therefore, authorities in Guatemala, Honduras and El Salvador are implementing several measures to control and minimize the impact.
During this time, 5,758 new COVID-19 cases have been reported in Honduras, reaching 13,943 infections. The second place is for Guatemala, with 4,584 reported cases, reaching 14,540 in total. El Salvador has recorded 1,327 cases in the last few days, reaching 5,150, making it the country with the fewest reported cases in the region.
In terms of deaths, Guatemala tops the list with 582 deaths. Honduras reports 405 deaths and El Salvador 119 deaths from Coronavirus. Because of this surge, Honduras and Guatemala have resumed their restrictive measures. The possibility that governments will backtrack on their economic reopening actions has not been ruled out.
Central America
Honduras vote vount drags on as Asfura and Nasralla remain in technical tie
Honduras remained on edge this Friday as the presidential election vote count continued, with a technical tie persisting between right-wing candidates Nasry Asfura, backed by U.S. President Donald Trump, and Salvador Nasralla, five days after the election.
The vote tally has progressed slowly, with interruptions and amid fraud allegations from Nasralla, the 72-year-old television host and candidate of the Liberal Party (PL).
“The world is already talking about the fraud they are trying to commit against” the Liberal Party, Nasralla wrote on X, as he denounced irregularities in the uploading of vote tally sheets into the system and announced legal challenges.
With 88% of the polling station records counted, Asfura of the conservative National Party (PN) leads with 40.20%, while Nasralla follows closely with 39.47%, according to the National Electoral Council (CNE).
Around 2,000 tally sheets with inconsistencies will also undergo a special review. Nasralla has questioned whether the CNE will be able to deliver final results before December 30, the legal deadline for announcing the official outcome.
Central America
Juan Orlando Hernández thanks Donald Trump after U.S. pardon
Former Honduran President Juan Orlando Hernández expressed his gratitude on Wednesday to U.S. President Donald Trump after being pardoned on Monday following more than three years in a New York prison, where he had been sentenced in 2024 to 45 years for drug trafficking and firearms offenses.
Hernández thanked Trump on social media platform X, stating: “President Trump, thank you for listening and responding when it was most needed. You saw the injustice committed against me and my country and corrected it. Your support for Honduras, your leadership, and your timely decision meant everything to my freedom and my nation. You have my respect and gratitude forever.”
In his message, Hernández began by saying: “THANK GOD. All glory be to Him. I am a free man. I said it when I left my home, I said it when I was unjustly convicted, and I say it today as I regain my freedom. I am innocent.”
He also expressed deep appreciation to his family and friends who “never stopped fighting and praying” for him, while blaming, as Trump had, the administration of former U.S. President Joe Biden for his conviction. Hernández described his trial as a manipulated process orchestrated by the Biden-Harris administration and the deep state, claiming there was no real evidence, only accusations from criminals seeking revenge.
Hernández was extradited to the U.S. in April 2022 and sentenced in June 2024. His wife, Ana García, told EFE that Hernández had written to Trump on October 28, his 57th birthday, requesting a pardon, which Trump granted. García added that the couple has not yet decided whether Hernández will return to Honduras, where he could face investigations for alleged corruption, according to Attorney General Johel Zelaya.
Central America
Honduras Extends Voting by One Hour Amid High Turnout, CNE Announces
The National Electoral Council (CNE) announced that polling stations will remain open an extra hour due to the high voter turnout in Honduras’ general elections this Sunday.
These elections—the twelfth since the country returned to constitutional order in 1980 after nearly two decades of military governments—will now run until 6:00 p.m. local time (00:00 GMT), the CNE said in a statement.
The extension may only be applied for the additional hour established in the Electoral Law, and polling stations may close only after the last voter already in line at closing time has cast their ballot, ensuring that all those waiting are able to participate, the CNE added.
More than six million of Honduras’ ten million inhabitants were called to the polls to elect the successor to leftist President Xiomara Castro, as well as 298 municipal mayors, 128 members of the national Congress, and 20 representatives to the Central American Parliament.
The presidential race features Rixi Moncada, candidate of the ruling Liberty and Refoundation Party (Libre); Nasry Asfura of the National Party, the main opposition force—publicly endorsed by U.S. President Donald Trump—and Salvador Nasralla of the Liberal Party, also running from the opposition.
Before the extension was announced, the CNE had indicated it would release its first preliminary report around 9:00 p.m. local time (03:00 GMT) and a second one at 11:00 p.m. (05:00 GMT). Final results must be published within 30 days following the election.
-
International3 days agoWMO predicts 55% chance of weakened La Niña impacting global weather this winter
-
Central America3 days agoJuan Orlando Hernández thanks Donald Trump after U.S. pardon
-
Internacionales4 days agoJuan Orlando Hernández’s family takes time to decide next steps after surprise U.S. release
-
International4 days agoRussian authorities ban Roblox citing child safety and moral concerns
-
International3 days agoSpain’s PSOE summons Mark Zuckerberg over alleged mass surveillance on Android users
-
International3 days agoNew York Times sues Pentagon over new press restrictions, citing First Amendment violations
-
International2 days agoCatalonia’s president calls for greater ambition in defending democracy
-
International4 days agoClimate-driven rains trigger one of Indonesia’s deadliest flood emergencies in years
-
Central America1 day agoHonduras vote vount drags on as Asfura and Nasralla remain in technical tie
-
International2 days agoMaría Corina Machado says Venezuela’s political transition “must take place”
-
International1 day agoFive laboratories investigated in Spain over possible African Swine Fever leak























