The Obama Administration tried again this week to take on the coupsters of Honduras. With more than two months passed since Honduran President Manuel Zelaya was exiled in a military ouster — and less ...
A supporter of ousted Honduran President Manuel Zelaya and policemen read a newspaper during a protest at the National Congress in Tegucigalpa on July 20, 2009. JOSE CABEZAS/AFP via Getty Images. On ...
TEGUCIGALPA, June 28 (Reuters) - Shots were fired near the presidential palace in Honduras where protests erupted after the army ousted and exiled leftist President Manuel Zelaya on Sunday in Central ...
Conservative commentators cheered Monday morning as Honduras looked poised to elect a new, conservative president, Porfirio Lobo Jr. Five months ago, the military ousted left-leaning President Manuel ...
The International Gay and Lesbian Human Rights Commission on July 17 condemned "the recent murder and arbitrary arrests of … LGBT activists in Honduras." "IGLHRC has learned that these human rights ...
(For full coverage of Honduras crisis, click on [nHONDURAS]) * Soup kitchens close, medicines scarce after aid cut * Honduras heavily dependent on foreign donors By Robin Emmott TEGUCIGALPA, Nov 12 ...
The country is a major stop for drug traffickers and corruption is rampant. Many experts say things got markedly worse after democratically... 'Who Rules In Honduras?' Coup's Legacy Of Violence The ...
Before becoming a teacher here in Harrisburg at the Nativity School, I spent a year of international service through the Mennonite Central Committee teaching in the rural town of Tocoa, Honduras. The ...
Honduras' interim leaders late Sunday suspended key civil liberties in response to "calls for insurrection" by ousted President Manuel Zelaya, empowering police and soldiers to break up "unauthorized" ...
The killers were waiting for Lucas Manzanares as his Mazda pickup rolled through downtown Tegucigalpa the morning of May 8. With him were his wife, daughter and 6-year-old granddaughter; but as he ...
TEGUCIGALPA, Honduras — Rony Gomez will stay home when Hondurans go to the polls today to elect a president, five months after the military and Congress ousted the last one. “I won’t vote,” he said.