Central America
Guatemala calls for mobilizations in rejection of coup d’état

September 18 |
Guatemalan organizations and university students called for nationwide mobilizations this Monday to support the president-elect, Bernardo Arévalo, who will ask for the dismissal of the Attorney General of the Public Prosecutor’s Office, Consuelo Porras.
According to local media, Arevalo together with vice president Karin Herrera and members of the legal team of the Seed Movement will present an injunction before the Supreme Court of Justice (CSJ) to reestablish the constitutional order and dismiss the aforementioned official.
The proceedings also include the head of the Special Prosecutor’s Office against Impunity (FECI), Rafael Curruchiche, and Judge Fredy Orellana (in charge of the Seventh Criminal Court). Messages disseminated through social networks also demanded the dismissal of a FECI prosecutor, Cinthia Monterroso.
The public acts will take place in different scenarios and times. So far, the Assembly of Peoples of the South Coast, indigenous authorities of the 48 Cantons of Totonicapán, students from the University of San Carlos, the #JusticiaYa movement and the Justice, Peace and Integrity Commission of the Conference of Religious of Guatemala, among others, have confirmed their participation.
Through social networks, university students called for a peaceful march for dignity and in defense of democracy in Guatemala City (capital), starting at 15H30, from the Plaza de la República to the headquarters of the CSJ.
Once there, together with other sectors, they will support the elected president to present the above mentioned injunction, which gives continuity to mobilizations that, since last July, demanded Porras’ dismissal.
This Saturday, Arevalo denounced that the referred officials betrayed the people and used their authority to interfere in the results of the general elections.
Central America
Costa Rica faces historic vote on lifting presidential immunity for Rodrigo Chaves

Costa Rica, a country internationally recognized for its democratic and political stability, is heading toward an unprecedented decision: whether to lift President Rodrigo Chaves’s immunity so he can face a criminal trial over alleged irregular management of funds from the Central American Bank for Economic Integration (CABEI).
On Wednesday, the Legislative Assembly formed a commission of three lawmakers to analyze the accusation against the president, which was forwarded earlier this month by the Supreme Court of Justice. The commission has 20 days, extendable for another 20, to issue a report so that the full Assembly can vote on whether to lift the president’s immunity.
Lifting the immunity would require 38 votes — two-thirds of the legislature — which is largely composed of opposition parties.
If immunity is removed, prosecutors would be able to continue their investigation and potentially question the president. If the motion fails, the case would return to the judiciary and remain pending until Chaves’s term ends in May 2026.
Since the country’s last civil war in 1948 and the abolition of the army later that year, Costa Rica has held uninterrupted elections, every president has completed their term without major issues, and none has ever had their immunity lifted — although several have faced judicial proceedings.
Central America
Honduras sees ongoing killings of land defenders and attacks on press, warns NGO

The Association for Participatory Citizenship (ACI PARTICIPA) denounced on Thursday that killings of land defenders and attacks aimed at silencing the press continue in Honduras.
“We continue to see murders of defenders of land and territory, as well as aggressions to silence the press. In 2024, there were 490 attacks and aggressions that constitute human rights violations,” said ACI PARTICIPA’s executive director, Hedme Castro, during the presentation of the 2024 Report on the Situation of Human Rights Defenders in Honduras.
Castro noted that the aggressions range “from attempts on lives, threats, harassment, intimidation, and smear campaigns, which have become very frequent, to obstruction of work, surveillance, and criminalization.”
She highlighted that, although only seven defenders were killed in 2024 compared to 24 in 2023, “last year we saw a significantly high number of women murdered, and cases of missing children.”
Moreover, Castro criticized the authorities for failing to address the violence. “There is no response from the authorities to reduce the violence in the country; in fact, I believe that the ‘fathers of the nation’ (members of Parliament) are not setting the right example, and the situation in the Legislative branch is actually fueling violence,” she added, referring to frequent violent incidents in Congress.
The ACI PARTICIPA report also notes that the government led by President Xiomara Castro has made “an important effort over the past two years to improve citizens’ access to basic rights, helping to cushion the effects of economic deterioration, although a decent standard of living has yet to be achieved for the majority of Hondurans.”
Central America
Daniel Ortega’s last historic sandinista ally detained in Managua

Former Sandinista revolutionary commander and presidential economic adviser Bayardo Arce Castaño was arrested on Thursday in Managua for alleged irregular transactions involving state-owned assets, according to local media reports.
The arrest was carried out by agents from the Special Operations Directorate of the Police, who raided his residence in the southern part of the Nicaraguan capital. The Attorney General’s Office (PGR) is investigating Arce for “transactions and/or negotiations” that, according to authorities, do not comply with current legal standards.
Arce, 76, was one of the nine historic commanders of the Sandinista National Liberation Front (FSLN) who led the overthrow of dictator Anastasio Somoza in 1979. Since 2007, he had served as the economic adviser to dictator Daniel Ortega, and was the last of the historic commanders still aligned with the regime.
The Attorney General’s Office accused Arce of contempt after he refused to appear for questioning about properties registered in his name. Authorities allege that Ricardo Bonilla, Arce’s assistant, was also involved in questionable financial dealings and was jailed after failing to comply with a summons.
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