PROFILE
OFFICIAL NAME:
Republic of Honduras
Geography
Area: 112,090 sq. km. (43,278 sq. mi.); slightly
larger than Virginia.
Cities: Capital--Tegucigalpa (1,150,000);
San Pedro Sula (800,000-900,000).
Terrain: Mountainous.
Climate: Tropical to subtropical, depending on
elevation.
People
Nationality: Noun and adjective--Honduran(s).
Population (2005 est.): 7 million.
Growth rate (2005 est.): 2.2%.
Ethnic groups: 90% mestizo (mixed Indian and
European); others of European, Arab, African, or
Asian ancestry; and indigenous Indians.
Religions: Roman Catholic, Protestant minority.
Language: Spanish.
Education (2003): Years compulsory--6.
Attendance--88% overall, 31% at junior high
level. Literacy--76.2%.
Health: Infant mortality rate--29.64/1,000.
Life expectancy--66.2 yrs.
Work force: Services--42.2%; natural
resources/agriculture--35.9%;
manufacturing--16.3%;
construction/housing--5.6%.
Government
Type: Democratic constitutional republic.
Independence: September 15, 1821.
Constitution: 1982; amended 1999.
Branches: Executive--president, directly
elected to 4-year term. Legislative--unicameral
National Congress, elected for 4-year term.
Judicial--Supreme Court of Justice
(appointed by Congress and confirmed by the
president); several lower courts.
Political parties: National Party, Liberal
Party, Innovation and National Unity Party,
Christian Democratic Party, and the Democratic
Unification Party.
Suffrage: Universal and compulsory at age 18.
Administrative subdivisions: 18 departments.
Economy (2005 est.)
GDP: $20.6 billion (PPP) or $8 billion (official
exchange rate).
Growth rate: 4.5%.
Per capita GDP: $2,900 (PPP).
Per capita income: $1,035
Natural resources: Arable land, forests,
minerals, and fisheries.
Agriculture (13% of GDP): Products--coffee,
bananas, shrimp and lobster, sugar, fruits,
basic grains, and livestock.
Manufacturing (31% of GDP): Types--textiles
and apparel, cement, wood products, cigars, and
foodstuffs.
Services (45% of GDP)
Trade: Exports--$1.73 billion: apparel,
coffee, shrimp, bananas, palm oil, gold,
zinc/lead concentrates, soap/detergents, melons,
lobster, pineapple, lumber, sugar, and tobacco.
Major market--U.S. (54.4%).
Imports--$4.16 billion: fabrics, yarn,
machinery, chemicals, petroleum, vehicles,
processed foods, metals, agricultural products,
plastic articles, and paper articles. Major
source--U.S. (37.5%).
PEOPLE
About 90% of the population is mestizo. There
also are small minorities of European, African,
Asian, Arab, and indigenous Indian descent. Most
Hondurans are Roman Catholic, but Protestant
churches are growing in number. While Spanish is
the predominant language, some English is spoken
along the northern coast and is prevalent on the
Caribbean Bay Islands. Several indigenous Indian
languages and Garífuna (a mixture of
Afro-indigenous languages) are also spoken. The
restored Mayan ruins near the Guatemalan border
in Copan reflect the great Mayan culture that
flourished there for hundreds of years until the
early 9th century. Columbus landed at mainland
Honduras (Trujillo) in 1502, and named the area
"Honduras" (meaning "depths") for the deep water
off the coast. Spaniard Hernan Cortes arrived in
1524.
HISTORY
Independence
Honduras and other Central American provinces
gained independence from Spain in 1821. The
country was then briefly annexed to the Mexican
Empire. In 1823, Honduras joined the newly
formed United Provinces of Central America
federation, which collapsed in 1838. Gen.
Francisco Morazan--a Honduran national hero--led
unsuccessful efforts to maintain the federation.
Honduras’ agriculture-based economy was
dominated in the 1900s by U.S. companies that
established vast banana plantations along the
north coast. Foreign capital, plantation life,
and conservative politics held sway in Honduras
from the late 19th century until the mid-20th
century.
Military Rule
Authoritarian Gen. Tiburcio Carias
Andino controlled Honduras during the Great
Depression, until 1948. In 1955--after two
authoritarian administrations and a strike by
banana workers--young military reformists staged
a coup that installed a provisional junta and
paved the way for constituent assembly elections
in 1957. This assembly appointed Ramon Villeda
Morales as President and transformed itself into
a national legislature with a 6-year term. The
Liberal Party ruled during 1957-63. In 1963,
conservative military officers preempted
constitutional elections and deposed Villeda in
a bloody coup. These officers exiled Liberal
Party members and took control of the national
police. The armed forces, led by Gen. Lopez
Arellano, governed until 1970. Popular
discontent continued to rise after a 1969 border
war with El Salvador, known as "the Soccer War."
A civilian President--Ramon Cruz of the National
Party--took power briefly in 1970 but proved
unable to manage the government. In 1972, Gen.
Lopez staged another coup. Lopez adopted more
progressive policies, including land reform, but
his regime was brought down in the mid-1970s by
corruption scandals. The regimes of Gen. Melgar
Castro (1975-78) and Gen. Paz Garcia (1978-83)
largely built the current physical
infrastructure and telecommunications system of
Honduras. The country also enjoyed its most
rapid economic growth during this period, due to
greater international demand for its products
and the availability of foreign commercial
lending.
Seven Consecutive Democratic
Elections
Following the overthrow of Anastasio Somoza in
Nicaragua in 1979 and general instability in El
Salvador at the time, Hondurans elected a
constituent assembly in 1980 and voted in
general elections in 1981. A new constitution
was approved in 1982, and the Liberal Party
government of President Roberto Suazo Cordoba
took office. Suazo relied on U.S. support during
a severe economic recession, including ambitious
social and economic development projects
sponsored by the U.S. Agency for International
Development (USAID). Honduras became host to the
largest Peace Corps mission in the world, and
nongovernmental and international voluntary
agencies proliferated.
As the 1985 election approached, the Liberal
Party interpreted election law as permitting
multiple presidential candidates from one party.
The Liberal Party claimed victory when its
presidential candidates, who received 42% of the
vote, collectively outpolled the National Party
candidate, Rafael Leonardo Callejas. Jose Azcona
Hoyo, the candidate receiving the most votes
among the Liberals, assumed the presidency in
1986. With the endorsement of the Honduran
military, the Azcona administration ushered in
the first peaceful transfer of power between
civilian presidents in more than 30 years.
Four years later, Nationalist Rafael Callejas
won the presidential election, taking office in
1990. The nation's fiscal deficit ballooned
during Callejas' last year in office. Growing
public dissatisfaction with the rising cost of
living and with widespread government corruption
led voters in 1993 to elect Liberal Party
candidate Carlos Roberto Reina with 56% of the
vote. President Reina, elected on a platform
calling for a "moral revolution," actively
prosecuted corruption and pursued those
responsible for human rights abuses in the
1980s. He created a modern attorney general's
office and an investigative police force,
increased civilian control over the armed
forces, transferred the police from military to
civilian authority, and restored national fiscal
health.
After winning the 1997 election by a 10%
margin, Liberal Carlos Roberto Flores Facusse
took office in 1998. Flores inaugurated programs
of reform and modernization of the Honduran
government and economy, with emphasis on helping
Honduras' poorest citizens while maintaining the
country's fiscal health and improving
international competitiveness. In October 1998,
Hurricane Mitch devastated Honduras, leaving
more than 5,000 people dead and 1.5 million
displaced. Damages totaled nearly $3 billion.
President Flores and his administration
successfully managed more than $600 million in
international assistance. President Flores also
moved judicial and penal reforms forward,
establishing an anticorruption commission, and
supporting passage of a new penal code based on
the oral accusatorial system and a law that
created an independent Supreme Court. Flores
also established a civilian Minister of Defense.
Ricardo Maduro Joest of the National Party
won the 2001 presidential elections by 8
percent, and was inaugurated in 2002. During his
campaign, President Maduro promised to reduce
crime, reinvigorate the economy, and fight
corruption. Maduro’s first act as President was
to deploy a joint police-military force to the
streets to permit wider neighborhood patrols in
the ongoing fight against the country’s massive
crime and gang problem. Maduro was a strong
supporter of the global war on terrorism and
joined the U.S.-led coalition in Iraq with an
11-month contribution of 370 troops. Under
President Maduro’s guidance, Honduras also
negotiated and ratified the U.S.-Central America
Free Trade Agreement (CAFTA), received debt
relief, became the first Latin American country
to sign a Millennium Challenge Account compact
with the U.S., and actively promoted greater
Central American integration.
Jose Manuel "Mel" Zelaya Rosales of the
Liberal Party won the November 27, 2005
presidential elections by under 4 percent—the
smallest margin ever. Zelaya’s campaign theme
was "citizen power," and he has vowed to
increase transparency and combat
narcotrafficking, while maintaining
macroeconomic stability. The Liberal Party won
62 of the 128 congressional seats, just short of
an absolute majority. Zelaya was inaugurated on
January 27, 2006.
GOVERNMENT
The 1982 constitution provides for a strong
executive, a unicameral National Congress, and a
judiciary appointed by the National Congress.
The president is directly elected to a 4-year
term by popular vote. The Congress also serves a
4-year term; congressional seats are assigned
the parties' candidates in proportion to the
number of votes each party receives in the
various departments. The judiciary includes a
Supreme Court of Justice, courts of appeal, and
several courts of original jurisdiction--such as
labor, tax, and criminal courts. For
administrative purposes, Honduras is divided
into 18 departments, with municipal officials
selected for 4-year terms.
POLITICAL CONDITIONS
Reinforced by the media and several
political watchdog organizations, human rights
and civil liberties are reasonably well
protected. Organized labor now represents
approximately 8% of the work force and its
economic and political influence has declined.
Honduras held its seventh consecutive democratic
elections in 2005 to elect a new president,
unicameral Congress, and mayors. For the first
time, voters were able to vote for individual
members of Congress rather than party lists.
Political Parties
The two major parties are the slightly
left-of-center Liberal Party and the
slightly-right-of-center National Party. The
three much smaller registered parties--the
Christian Democratic Party, the Innovation and
National Unity Party, and the Democratic
Unification Party—hold a few seats each in the
Congress, but have never come close to winning
the presidency.
Principal Government Officials
President—Jose Manuel "Mel" ZELAYA Rosales
Minister of Foreign Relations—Milton JIMENEZ
Puerto
President of Congress—Roberto MICHELETTI
Ambassador to the United States—Norman GARCIA
Paz
Ambassador to the United Nations--Manuel ACOSTA
BONILLA
Ambassador to the OAS--Salvador Enrique RODENZO
Honduras maintains an
embassy
in the United States at 3007 Tilden Street NW,
Washington, DC 20008 (tel. 202-966-7702).
ECONOMY
Honduras is one of the poorest and least
developed countries in Latin America, with
nearly two-thirds of Hondurans living in
poverty. Although historically dependent on
exports of coffee and bananas, the economy has
diversified over the past 20 years with the
development of non-traditional exports such as
cultivated shrimp, melons, and tourism, and the
establishment of a growing maquila industry
(primarily assembly for re-export of textiles
and apparel). The maquila industry employs
approximately 130,000 Hondurans. Honduras also
has extensive forest, marine, and mineral
resources, although widespread slash-and-burn
agricultural methods and illegal logging
continue to destroy Honduran forests. Family
remittances from Hondurans living abroad (mostly
in the United States) rose to an estimated $1.4
billion in 2005, or 15% of the country’s foreign
exchange.
The 2005 exchange rate was 18.92 Honduran
Lempira to the dollar, a slight devaluation from
the 2004 rate of 18.21. Inflation, as measured
by the consumer price index, was estimated at
9.2% in 2005. International reserves, which were
$1.16 billion at end of 2003, rebounded to an
estimated $2.23 billion in 2005. Unemployment
was estimated at around 28% in 2005.
In 2005, Honduras reached completion point
under the Heavily Indebted Poor Countries (HIPC)
initiative, qualifying the country for
multilateral debt relief. Honduras has also done
well in maintaining its commitments under its
3-year International Monetary Fund (IMF) Poverty
Reduction and Growth Facility program, begun in
2004.
NATIONAL SECURITY
With the cessation of the 1980s civil wars in El
Salvador and Nicaragua, the Honduran armed
forces refocused their orientation toward
combating transnational threats such as
narcoterrorism and organized crime. Honduras
supports efforts at regional integration and
deployed troops to Iraq in support of Operation
Iraqi Freedom. In 1999, the constitution was
amended to abolish the position of military
commander in chief of the armed forces, thus
codifying civilian authority over the military.
Former President Flores also named the first
civilian Minister of Defense in the country's
history.
FOREIGN RELATIONS
Honduras is a member of the United Nations,
the World Trade Organization (WTO), the
Organization of American States (OAS), the
Central American Parliament (PARLACEN), the
Central American Integration System (SICA), the
Conference of Central American Armed Forces (CFAC),
and the Central American Security Commission (CASC).
During 1995-96, Honduras—a founding member of
the United Nations--served as a nonpermanent
member of the UN Security Council for the first
time. Honduras is currently a member of the UN
Human Rights Commission. Honduras is a party to
all UN and OAS counterterrorism conventions and
protocols.
Honduras is a strong proponent of Central
American cooperation and integration, and
continues to work towards the implementation of
a regional customs union and Central American
passport, which would ease border controls and
tariffs among Honduras, Guatemala, Nicaragua,
and El Salvador.
In 1969, El Salvador and Honduras fought the
brief "Soccer War" over disputed border areas.
The two countries formally signed a peace treaty
in 1980, which put the border dispute before the
International Court of Justice (ICJ). In 1992,
the Court awarded most of the disputed territory
to Honduras, and in 1998, Honduras and El
Salvador signed a border demarcation treaty to
implement the terms of the ICJ decree.
Demarcation has not yet been completed, but
Honduras and El Salvador maintain normal
diplomatic and trade relations. Honduras also
has unresolved maritime border disputes with El
Salvador, Nicaragua, Jamaica, and Cuba.
U.S.-HONDURAN RELATIONS
Overview
The United States and Honduras have close and
friendly relations. Honduras is supportive of
U.S. policy in the United Nations and other
fora, as well of the war on terrorism. Honduras
was among the first countries to sign an
International Criminal Court (ICC) Article 98
Agreement with the U.S., and the Honduran port
of Puerto Cortes is part of the U.S.’ Container
Security Initiative (CSI).
The United States favors stable, peaceful
relations between Honduras and its Central
American neighbors. During the 1980s, Honduras
supported U.S. policy opposing a revolutionary
Marxist government in Nicaragua and an active
leftist insurgency in El Salvador. The Honduran
Government also played a key role in
negotiations that culminated in the 1990
Nicaraguan elections. Honduras continues to
participate in the UN observer mission in the
Western Sahara, contributed 370 troops for the
reconstruction of Iraq, and remains interested
in participating in other UN peacekeeping
missions.
The United States is Honduras' chief trading
partner, with two-way trade in goods increasing
to $7 billion in 2005. U.S.-Honduran trade is
dominated by the Honduran maquila industry,
which imports yarn and textiles from the United
States and exports finished articles of
clothing. Other leading Honduran exports to the
United States include coffee, bananas, seafood
(particularly shrimp), minerals (including zinc,
lead, gold, and silver), and other fruits and
vegetables. The United States encourages U.S.
investment that contributes to Honduran
development and bilateral trade.
The stock of U.S. direct investment in
Honduras in 2004 was $339 million, up from $262
million in 2003. FDI flow into Honduras in 2004
surpassed $200 million, with the United States
leading the way. The largest U.S. investments in
Honduras are in the maquila sector, fruit
production (particularly bananas, melons, and
pineapple), tourism, energy generation, shrimp
culture, animal feed production,
telecommunications, fuel distribution, cigar
manufacturing, insurance, brewing, leasing, food
processing, and furniture manufacturing. Many
U.S. franchises, particularly in the restaurant
sector, operate in Honduras.
In 2004, the United States signed a free
trade agreement with Honduras, El Salvador,
Nicaragua, Guatemala, Costa Rica, and the
Dominican Republic. The legislatures of all
signatories but Costa Rica ratified the
U.S.-Central America Free Trade Agreement
(CAFTA) in 2005, and the agreement is expected
to enter into force in the first half of 2006.
CAFTA will eliminate tariffs and other barriers
to trade in goods, services, agricultural
products, and investments. Additionally, CAFTA
is seen as a mechanism to solidify democracy,
encourage greater regional integration, and
provide safeguards for environmental protection
and labor rights.
In June 2005, Honduras became the first
country in the hemisphere to sign a Millennium
Challenge Account (MCA) compact with the USG.
Under the compact, the U.S.
Millennium
Challenge Corporation will invest $215
million over five years to help Honduras improve
its road infrastructure, diversify its
agriculture, and get its products to market.
The United States maintains a small presence
at a Honduran military base; the two countries
conduct joint peacekeeping, counternarcotics,
humanitarian, disaster relief, and civic action
exercises. U.S. troops conduct and provide
logistics support for a variety of bilateral and
multilateral exercises--medical, engineering,
peacekeeping, counternarcotics, and disaster
relief--for the benefit of the Honduran people
and their Central American neighbors. U.S.
forces--regular, reserve, and National
Guard--benefit greatly from the training and
exercises.
U.S. Policy Toward Honduras
U.S. policy toward Honduras is aimed at
consolidating stable democracy with a justice
system that protects human rights and promotes
the rule of law. U.S. Government programs are
aimed at promoting a healthy and more open
economy capable of sustainable growth, improving
the climate for business and investment while
protecting U.S. citizen and corporate rights,
and promoting the well-being of the Honduran
people. The United States also works with
Honduras to meet transnational
challenges--including the fight against
terrorism, narcotics trafficking, money
laundering, illegal migration, and trafficking
in persons--and encourages and supports Honduran
efforts to protect the environment. The goals of
strengthening democracy and promoting viable
economic growth are especially important given
the geographical proximity of Honduras to the
United States. Approximately 800,000 to 1
million Hondurans reside in the United States;
consequently, immigration issues are an
important item on our bilateral agenda.
U.S.-Honduran ties are further strengthened
by numerous private sector contacts, with an
average of between 80,000 and 110,000 U.S.
citizens visiting Honduras annually and about
15,000 Americans residing there. More than 150
American companies operate in Honduras.
Economic and Development Assistance
To help strengthen Honduras' democratic
institutions and improve living conditions, the
United States has provided substantial economic
assistance. The United States has historically
been the largest bilateral donor to Honduras.
The USAID
budget for Honduras is $45 million for fiscal
year 2006. Over the years, U.S. foreign
assistance has helped advance such objectives as
fostering democratic institutions, increasing
private sector employment and income, helping
Honduras fund its arrears with international
financial institutions, providing humanitarian
aid, increasing agricultural production, and
providing loans to microbusinesses.
1998's Hurricane Mitch--the worst natural
disaster ever to strike the Western
Hemisphere--left hundreds of thousands homeless,
devastated the road network and other public
infrastructure, and crippled certain key sectors
of the economy. Estimates show that Hurricane
Mitch caused $8.5 billion in damages to homes,
hospitals, schools, roads, farms, and businesses
throughout Central America, including more than
$3 billion in Honduras alone.
In response, the United States provided more
than $461 million in immediate disaster relief
and humanitarian aid spread over the years
1998-2001. This supplemental assistance was
designed to help repair water and sanitation
systems; replace housing, schools, and roads;
provide agricultural inputs; provide local
government crisis management training; grant
debt relief; and encourage environmental
management expertise. Additional resources were
utilized to maintain anti-crime and drug
assistance programs.
In 2001, the United States also provided food
aid in response to a short drought and the
depressed state of the agriculture sector.
Subsequently, the United States provided
$265,000 in disaster assistance after Tropical
Storm Michelle inundated the north coast with
floods. Most recently, the United States
provided assistance for Honduras’ recovery from
2005’s devastating storms, including Hurricane
Beta and Tropical Storm Gamma.
The
Peace Corps has been active in
Honduras since 1962, and currently the program
is one of the largest in the world. In 2005,
there were 220 Peace Corps Volunteers working in
the poorest parts of Honduras.
The U.S. Government strongly supports the
professionalization of the civilian police force
as an important element in strengthening the
rule of law in Honduras. The American Embassy in
Tegucigalpa provides specialized training to
police officers.
Security Assistance
The role of the Honduran armed forces has
changed significantly in recent years as many
institutions formerly controlled by the military
are now under civilian authority. The defense
and police budgets have hovered at around $35
million during the past few years. Honduras
receives modest U.S. security assistance funds
and training.
In the absence of a large security assistance
program, defense cooperation has taken the form
of increased participation by the Honduran armed
forces in military-to-military contact programs
and bilateral and multilateral combined
exercises oriented toward peacekeeping, disaster
relief, humanitarian/civic assistance, and
counternarcotics. The U.S. Joint Task Force
Bravo (JTF-B), stationed at the Honduran Soto
Cano Air Base, plays a vital role in supporting
combined exercises in Honduras and in
neighboring Central American countries. While
JTF-Bravo has been involved in several
multilateral exercises and numerous smaller
humanitarian deployments, it played an
absolutely critical role in helping the United
States to respond to natural disasters in
Central America by saving lives, repairing
critical infrastructure, and in meeting high
priority health and sanitation needs. U.S.
forces also delivered millions of dollars worth
of privately donated goods to those in need.
U.S. Business Opportunities
Bilateral trade between the two nations totaled
$7 billion in 2005. Exports of goods and
services from the U.S. totaled $2.56 billion
2002, and Honduran exports to the U.S. totaled
$3.26 billion. U.S. investors
account for nearly two-thirds of the estimated
stock of $1.3 billion in foreign direct
investment in Honduras. More than 150 American
companies operate in Honduras; U.S. franchises
are present in increasing numbers.
Opportunities for U.S. business sales include
textile machinery, construction equipment,
automotive parts and accessories,
telecommunications equipment, pollution
control/water resources equipment, agricultural
machinery, hotel and restaurant equipment,
computers and software, franchising, and
household consumer goods. Best prospects for
agricultural products are corn, milled rice,
wheat, soybean meal, and consumer-ready
products.
U.S. citizens contemplating investment in
real estate in Honduras should proceed with
extreme caution, especially in the Bay Islands
or coastal areas, because of frequently
conflicting legislation, problems with land
titles, and a weak judicial system. Investors or
their attorneys should check property titles not
only with the property registry office having
jurisdiction in the area in which the property
is located (being especially observant of
marginal annotations on the deed and that the
property is located within the area covered by
the original title), but also with the National
Agrarian Institute (INA) and the National
Forestry Administration (COHDEFOR). Investors in
land should be aware that even clear title is
not a guarantee that a future dispute over land
would be resolved equitably.
Principal U.S. Embassy Officials
Ambassador--Charles
A. Ford
Deputy Chief of Mission—Jim Williard
Political Counselor—Derrick Olsen
Economic Counselor—Patrick Dunn
Consul General--Ian Brownlee
Management Counselor--Jesse Coronado
USAID Director--Paul Tuebner
Public Affairs Officer--Melissa Cooper
Defense Attache--COL Derek Dickey
Military Group Commander--COL Jeffrey Moragne
Peace Corps Director--Ruben Hernandez
The
U.S. Embassy in Honduras is located
on Avenida La Paz, Tegucigalpa (tel.:
011-504-236-9320; faxes:
general--011-504-236-9037,
USAID--011-504-236-7776,
Consulate--011-504-237-1792). Internet:
http://honduras.usembassy.gov/english/index_e1.htm