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Honduras has over two thousand COVID-19 deaths

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So far in the pandemic, the Honduran death toll has risen to 2,049 people. The data was provided by the National Risk Management System (Sinager).

Yesterday, Sinager reported 205 positive cases and five deaths. The Department of Comayagua recorded two deaths. While the Departments of Francisco Morazán, Intibucá and Valle recorded one each. Of the 205 infections, Francisco Morazán had the highest number (98).

Honduras’s first three COVID-19 cases were confirmed on March 11. Two women who arrived in the country from Spain and Switzerland. The other case, a man who got infected in Tegucigalpa.

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Central America

Spanish Ex-Congresswoman Calls for ‘Bukele-Style’ Security Policies in Europe

Spanish lawyer and former congresswoman Macarena Olona believes that Europe’s decline in public safety can be reversed by adopting anti-gang policies similar to those implemented by Salvadoran President Nayib Bukele.

“Historic. The U.S. State Department has given El Salvador its highest travel rating, Level 1. Spain is at Level 2, considered a higher risk to travelers’ safety. Europe will only stop its decline by following models that have proven effective: Bukele’s security model,” Olona posted on social media.

Spanish newspaper Marca echoed Olona’s remarks, highlighting in an online article that “the arrival of Nayib Bukele to the presidency of El Salvador in 2019 changed the country forever.” That year, the president unveiled his anti-gang strategy.

“Thanks to the Territorial Control Plan, Bukele’s government arrested over 84,000 suspected gang members, driving violence in the country down to record lows,” Marca added.

Three years later, in response to a spike in homicides in March 2022, Bukele’s administration invoked a constitutional state of emergency to intensify the crackdown on criminal groups. The government also built the Terrorism Confinement Center, a high-security prison to hold thousands of inmates.

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International

Two fans killed in gate collapse outside Chile’s Estadio Monumental

Two people lost their lives near the Estadio Monumental in Santiago, Chile, following a chaotic incident that occurred before the Copa Libertadores match between Colo Colo and Brazil’s Fortaleza on April 10. According to the Public Prosecutor’s Office, the victims were crushed after a fence on the stadium perimeter collapsed, though authorities are investigating whether a police armored vehicle may have played a role.

It was a black Thursday at Chile’s Estadio Monumental. Two local fans died outside the stadium after a yet-unclarified incident caused a metal gate to fall on them, leading to fatal asphyxiation.

Local media reports indicate that a group of fans attempted to force their way into the stadium before kickoff. In response, local police allegedly deployed armored vehicles to block the breach.

Preliminary reports cited by local newspapers and news agencies like EFE identify the victims as two young individuals—one 18 years old and the other just 13.

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Central America

Nicaragua seeks ICJ intervention in Gaza conflict amid escalating violations

The Government of Nicaragua announced on Thursday that it has once again requested the International Court of Justice (ICJ) of the United Nations to intervene “as part” of the legal proceedings initiated by South Africa against Israel, accusing it of violating the 1948 Genocide Convention with its ongoing war in the Gaza Strip since October 7, following an attack by the Islamist group Hamas on Israeli territory.

In a statement, the Nicaraguan government, led by Daniel Ortega and his wife Rosario Murillo, explained that on April 1, they had decided to discontinue the proceedings filed with the ICJ related to the “severe violations of the rights of the Palestinian people and state,” due to the “high financial cost” involved for a developing country like Nicaragua, which faces significant economic restrictions.

“However, in the last week, there has been an escalation in violations against the Palestinian people and even against international humanitarian services, clearly revealing Israel’s disregard for all international law norms and the total complicity, particularly of some Western countries, which have decided to continue their political, economic, and military support for those responsible for these crimes,” stated the Nicaraguan government.

In light of this, the government continued, and “making a great effort, Nicaragua has decided to notify the International Court of Justice that it wishes to continue with the legal proceedings regarding the violations of the rights of the Palestinian people.”

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