Honduras


Currently


2009

  • Honduras: Solution or Stall?

    Honduras: Solution or Stall?

    Greg Grandin

    Roberto Micheletti has agreed to a plan to end the country's political impasse. But the coup government is already looking for loopholes.

  • Honduras's 'Bloodless Coup': What You're Not Seeing on TV

    Avi Lewis

    In Honduras, people are dying while the world looks the other way. Real international pressure--especially from the US--is the only force that could stop that now.

  • Honduran Coup Regime in Crisis

    Greg Grandin

    Those who seized power in June have polarized society, delegitimized political institutions and empowered social movements.

  • Noted.

    The Editors

    Zelaya talks to Tom Hayden. Subscribe

  • Zelaya points to a State Department document as he speaks to the media following his meeting with Clinton on September 3, 2009.

    Zelaya Speaks

    Tom Hayden

    In an exclusive Nation interview, the deposed Honduran president assesses the significance of his recent meeting with Secretary of State Clinton.

  • Zelaya's Coup

    Tom Hayden

    In an exclusive Nation interview, the ousted Honduran president calls the new State Department aid cutoff a "direct blow" against the regime that exiled him.

  • Battle for Honduras--and the Region

    Greg Grandin : Central America

    The coup has encouraged those who want to halt the advance of the Latin American left.

  • Immigrants Sound Off on Honduras

    Marcos Meconi & Joseph Huff-Hannon

    Honduran immigrants in New York City discuss their view of recent events that removed President Manuel Zelaya from office.

  • Waiting for Zelaya

    Greg Grandin

    Honduras's deposed president, Manuel Zelaya, camps out at the border while the military detains hundreds of protesters. Meanwhile, in an echo of the cold war, several political activists have been killed or disappeared in the past month.

  • Democracy Derailed in Honduras

    Greg Grandin

    The military coup that ousted President Manuel Zelaya has drawn strong condemnation from President Obama and the world. But will the US government offer its unconditional support for his return to power?

  • Supporters of Honduras's President Zelaya sing the national anthem outside the presidential house in Tegucigalpa.

    Honduras Crisis Forces Obama's Hand

    Tom Hayden

    The military coup in Honduras puts pressure on the president to break sharply with past American policies or risk losing remains of Latin America's goodwill.

2007

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