Honduras Regional Emigration
View of Comayagüela
Courtesy Richard Haggerty
Street scene in Tegucigalpa
Courtesy Richard Haggerty
Since the early twentieth century, Honduras has had the
challenge of absorbing thousands of immigrants from
neighboring
countries. Political tensions throughout Central America
have been
a key factor behind much of the immigration. The number of
immigrants from El Salvador looking for land or jobs was
especially
high between the early twentieth century and the onset of
the 1969
Soccer War between El Salvador and Honduras. A significant
number
of Salvadoran immigrants worked in the banana plantations
during
the 1930s and 1940s.
Armed conflict in Nicaragua, Guatemala, and El Salvador
in the
1980s resulted in the arrival of more than 60,000
refugees. Most of
these refugees live near their respective borders, and the
majority
are women and children. Throughout the 1980s, Nicaraguan
refugees
continued to arrive in Honduras as the war between
Nicaragua's
Sandinista government and the Nicaraguan Resistance forces
(known
as the Contras, short for contrarevolucionarios--
counterrevolutionaries in Spanish) intensified. By the
early 1990s,
Honduras hosted an estimated 250,000 refugees or
immigrants from
Central America.
Data as of December 1993
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