Honduras Security Report — 2026-05-18
ELEVATEDExecutive Summary
Honduras maintains an ELEVATED (3/5) threat level during May 11-18, 2026. President Xiomara Castro's government continues navigating the post-narcostate transition following the historic extradition and conviction of former President Juan Orlando Hernández on drug trafficking charges in the United States. While the extradition sent a powerful signal, the structural narco-trafficking networks remain largely intact, with cartels adapting to new political dynamics.
San Pedro Sula and the broader Sula Valley remain epicenters of gang violence and drug trafficking logistics. The La Mosquitia region on the Caribbean coast continues serving as a primary cocaine landing zone for South American shipments. Homicide rates have declined from peak levels but at 36 per 100,000 remain among the world's highest. Land rights defenders face ongoing targeted violence, with Honduras consistently ranking as one of the most dangerous countries for environmental activists.
Key Developments
Political Situation
- President Castro's LIBRE party faced congressional fragmentation; coalition with Salvador Nasralla's party strained over cabinet positions
- Anti-corruption commission (UFERCO) secured convictions against three former Hernández-era officials
- Military Police for Public Order (PMOP) expanded despite human rights concerns about militarized policing
- Opposition National Party restructuring under new leadership; maintains significant municipal control
- US-Honduras bilateral relationship strengthened through Engel List enforcement and conditional aid framework
Security Environment
- San Pedro Sula: MS-13 and Barrio 18 warfare in Chamelecón and Rivera Hernández neighborhoods; 23 homicides in one week
- La Mosquitia cocaine landing operations: Navy interdicted 3 flights but estimates only 15% of flights detected
- Extortion (war tax) affects an estimated 79% of small businesses in urban areas; $200M annual extraction
- Land rights: 5 Garífuna community leaders killed in Atlántida department; Berta Cáceres legacy cases ongoing
- Police reform: 5,000 officers purged since 2016, but internal corruption persists in narcotics units
Economic Assessment
- GDP growth of 3.6% driven by textile maquila sector and agricultural exports (coffee, palm oil, shrimp)
- Remittances reached $9.2B (27% of GDP); primary economic lifeline for rural communities
- Lempira stable at HNL 24.8/USD with central bank intervention
- Free economic zones (ZEDE) policy reversed by Castro government; investor uncertainty in special economic zones
- Infrastructure: $600M Corredor Seco highway project advancing with IDB financing
Regional Dynamics
- Northern Triangle security cooperation with Guatemala and El Salvador continued at technical level
- Honduran migrants: 85,000 apprehended at US southern border in Q1 2026
- Joint maritime patrols with US Coast Guard in Caribbean approaches to La Mosquitia
- Honduras-El Salvador border dispute resolution framework advancing through OAS mediation
Outlook
Honduras's security trajectory shows modest improvement in governance but persistent structural challenges. The narco-state apparatus dismantled at the political apex remains operational at logistical and financial levels. Gang violence will continue absent comprehensive community-level intervention. Economic dependence on remittances creates vulnerability to US immigration policy shifts. The 2025 municipal elections consolidated LIBRE's position but opposition resurgence is possible in the 2029 general elections.
Sources
- InSight Crime Honduras Organized Crime Analysis
- Global Witness Annual Report on Land Defenders
- Criterio.hn investigative journalism
- US State Department Honduras Human Rights Report 2026
- UNODC Honduras Drug Trafficking Assessment