Central America
El Salvador’s Government carries out COVID-19 tests in the country’s public squares
Yesterday, the Salvadoran government, through the Ministry of Health and the Interdisciplinary Team for Epidemiological Containment (EICE), carried out more than 300 tests in the Plaza Salvador del Mundo, in San Salvador, to detect potential Coronavirus cases.
Francisco Alabi, Minister of Health, explained that the goal of this measure was to contain the infection curve throughout the country, besides providing citizens with access to the test. The cabins placed in Salvador del Mundo will remain there until Wednesday, then they will go to Santa Ana and San Miguel.
The goal is to continue searching for cases nationwide, added Minister Alabi. To date, El Salvador has registered more than 15,000 positive cases of COVID-19. “Tests are being carried out in the different regions of the country; some of them are for the population, others for doctors and also for vulnerable groups,” the Minister said.
President Bukele’s government continues to work towards containing the spread of the disease, preventing the country from entering Phase 4 of the pandemic.
Central America
El Salvador to host World Cup qualifiers vs. Guatemala and Panama at Estadio Cuscatlán

El Salvador’s national football team will host its final round World Cup qualifying matches against Guatemala and Panama at Estadio Cuscatlán, the honorary president of the National Sports Institute (INDES), Yamil Bukele, announced Thursday via a statement on his X account.
The official explained that this decision comes after the American rock band Guns N’ Roses, originally scheduled to perform at Estadio Cuscatlán on Saturday, October 4, will now hold their concert at Estadio Jorge “El Mágico” González. This change allows both of La Selecta’s qualifying matches to be played at the “Coloso de Monserrat.”
“After a series of efforts and in response to popular demand, we are pleased to announce that our senior national team’s CONCACAF World Cup qualifying matches next October (Oct. 10 vs. Panama and Oct. 14 vs. Guatemala) will take place at Estadio Cuscatlán,” the statement reads.
Bukele also thanked the event promoters and the band for agreeing to the stadium change. “We sincerely thank Guns N’ Roses and StarTicket for agreeing to move the concert originally scheduled for October 4 at Estadio Cuscatlán,” the statement adds.
Additionally, Bukele expressed gratitude to the FESFUT Regularization Commission for their efforts with CONCACAF to make this possible, and he urged fans to stay tuned to official channels to purchase tickets and support La Selecta in their World Cup qualifying campaign.
Central America
Honduran president Xiomara Castro suspends activities due to influenza

Honduran President Xiomara Castro announced on Thursday that she has “temporarily” suspended her public activities due to a severe influenza virus.
“A strong influenza virus requires me to rest, trusting that I will be fully recovered for the grand celebration of our National Independence Day” next Monday, Castro stated on the social media platform X.
The president had planned to participate in several inaugurations across the northern, central, and eastern regions of the country throughout the week. She added that “these events will be rescheduled for new dates.”
Central America
Nicaragua’s government expels bishops, priests, and nuns in religious persecution

At least 261 religious figures, including the president of the Nicaraguan Episcopal Conference, Carlos Enrique Herrera, have been expelled as part of the persecution by Daniel Ortega and Rosario Murillo’s regime against the Catholic Church, reported the NGO Colectivo Nicaragua Nunca Más in its report Faith Under Fire.
The report details that among those expelled are bishops Silvio Báez, Rolando Álvarez, Isidoro Mora, as well as the Apostolic Nuncio in Managua, Waldemar Stanislaw Sommertag, along with approximately 140 priests, over 90 nuns, ten seminarians, and three deacons from different dioceses in the country.
“Since the expulsion of Nuncio Sommertag in March 2022, relations between Nicaragua and the Vatican have significantly deteriorated,” the NGO noted.
The report also documents the closure of 5,609 non-profit organizations, of which 1,294 were religious, including churches, universities, schools, clinics, and humanitarian organizations. Most of these had their assets confiscated by the Sandinista government. Additionally, the telecommunications regulator TELCOR shut down 54 media outlets, including 22 religious radio stations and TV channels.
Repression has extended to other religious denominations, with forced disappearances and criminalization of evangelical pastors, control over temples, media censorship, fiscal pressure, property confiscation, and the cancellation of legal status for the Moravian Church. Pastor Rudy Palacios remains in detention as part of this pattern of persecution.
The NGO emphasized that churches, especially the Catholic Church, played a key role in the 2018 national dialogue, denouncing abuses and providing refuge to injured protesters, which fueled the government’s hostility.
In 2023, Pope Francis described Ortega’s regime as a “blatant dictatorship”, to which the Nicaraguan president responded by dissolving the Society of Jesus and labeling the Church as a “mafia” and “anti-democratic.”
-
International5 days ago
Ecuador’s Noboa declares State of Emergency in seven provinces amid fuel price protests
-
International5 days ago
Trump: U.S. has hit three venezuelan narco boats in Caribbean
-
International5 days ago
Colombia’s special peace tribunal hands down first sentence against former FARC leaders
-
Sin categoría5 days ago
Trump files $15 billion defamation suit against The New York Times
-
International3 days ago
Trump criticizes Putin, calls Ukraine war “one of the deadliest conflicts”
-
International4 days ago
Asteroid 2025 FA22, 300 meters long, to pass safely near Earth tomorrow
-
International2 days ago
Venezuelans arrive from U.S. as Maduro denounces naval deployment in Caribbean
-
International3 days ago
Trump says Jimmy Kimmel show suspension due to poor ratings, not politics
-
International4 days ago
Trump administration launches large-scale immigration operation in Chicago
-
International4 days ago
Bolsonaro diagnosed with skin cancer amid coup conviction
-
International3 days ago
Trump declares Antifa a “major terrorist organization” following Charlie Kirk’s death
-
International4 days ago
Milei praises Paraguay’s growth, calls Argentina’s last 20 years a ‘decline’
-
International3 days ago
Padilla and Durbin seek oversight as deportation of Guatemalan minors sparks legal concerns
-
International2 days ago
Ecuador to decide on new constituent assembly in controversial executive decree
-
International8 hours ago
Zelensky to meet Trump at UN as Russia escalates strikes on Ukraine
-
International2 days ago
Judge throws out Trump’s defamation suit against New York Times
-
International2 days ago
Trump administration restores full ESTA access for Hungary
-
International8 hours ago
Trump unveils $1 million “Golden Card” residency program