Honduras has registered 2,646 confirmed cases of coronavirus and 142 deaths so far. Honduras has registered 2,646 confirmed cases of coronavirus and 142 deaths so far. Die COVID-19-Pandemie betrifft die neuartige Erkrankung COVID-19.
I peel them and sell them outside our house,” she says. “Thank god my landlady is not charging me,” she says, “but I promised her that when I find a job I will pay my monthly [US$33] rent.”To make some money, Liliana collects firewood on a nearby riverbank, together with one of her daughters. Coronavirus and Organized Crime; Honduras; Police Reform; Security Policy; The Honduran Military Police of Public Order are members of the armed forces tasked with law enforcement. TEGUCIGALPA, Honduras -- The hospitalization of Honduras’ president with COVID-19 and pneumonia Wednesday has drawn attention to another country struggling under … In Honduras, Coronavirus Lockdown is Enforced at Gunpoint. Since the age of 13, Yensi’s been selling corn cobs and Her husband, a taxi driver, is also not earning any money — Honduras’s public transport ban extends to cabs. Ab dem 11. REUTERS/Jorge Cabrera

Diese wird durch das Virus SARS-CoV-2 aus der Gruppe der Coronaviridae verursacht und gehört in die Gruppe der Atemwegserkrankungen.
“I would earn US$5 a day — this is how much they would pay me for washing six dozens of pieces of clothing,” she says. “For four days we have had only one meal a day. Reporting by Gustavo Palencia; Editing by Raju GopalakrishnanFILE PHOTO: A hospital worker is seen at San Felipe Hospital where hospital beds have been prepared in anticipation of patients with coronavirus disease (COVID-19), in Tegucigalpa, Honduras April 1, 2020. The remaining 18,000 live in urban areas and receive cash transfers or vouchers they can spend on foods of their choice at local retailers.Deisy Xiomara Castro is a little nervous as she waits for her cash transfer. “But now, nothing is coming up.” Some of Deisy’s old customers have lost their jobs and others are not hiring her for fear of infection.Washing load after load, she managed to send one of her elder daughters to university but any further plans are all on hold now.“It’s very hard,” she says, with a tear in her eye. The curfew will now be in effect until May 24, a spokesman for the security ministry, Jair Meza, told a national radio and television network. Roughly 40% of the population was already … The country was battered by … “I’ve never been in a bank before,” she says.A single mother of six, before coronavirus she earned a living doing other people’s laundry. “Some days he goes to the river to pick mangoes. Reporting by Gustavo Palencia; Editing by Raju Gopalakrishnan Our … The curfew, first imposed in mid-March, has been extended eight times as the government attempts to avoid overwhelming the health system, which struggles to meet the needs of the country’s 9.2 million people even in normal times. Of these, 11,000 live in rural areas and receive in-kind food baskets and hygiene kits. “There are days when we have some, and others when we don’t.”WFP is issuing an urgent call for US$4.9 billion in funding in order to reach up to 138 million people, like Yensi, with food assistance by the end of the year — the biggest mobilization in the organization’s history.Liliana López is a single mother with three children aged five, nine and 13.

Die COVID-19-Pandemie tritt in Honduras seit März 2020 als Teil der weltweiten COVID-19-Pandemie auf, die im Dezember 2019 in China ihren Ausgang nahm. Analysis; Written by Escrito por Eimhin O'Reilly - May 7, 2020. There are almost 10,000 confirmed cases of the coronavirus in Honduras and 330 deaths. She has been unemployed for three months, having lost her job as a domestic worker when the pandemic broke out. SHARE . My children would only have a little coffee in the morning and some rice in the afternoon.

Photo: WFP/Hetze Tosta. WFP is providing assistance to 29,000 rural families in Honduras. Honduras has reported nearly 600 confirmed coronavirus cases to date, as well around 50 deaths. Honduras has confirmed more than 9,000 cases of the coronavirus, with 322 deaths, according to the Pan American Health Organization. Honduras has reported nearly 600 confirmed coronavirus cases to date, as well around 50 deaths. März 2020 stufte die Weltgesundheitsorganisation (WHO) das Ausbruchsgeschehen des neuartigen Coronavirus als weltweite 4 min read. TEGUCIGALPA (Reuters) - Honduras on Sunday extended its blanket curfew for a week, a key measure in its efforts to curb the spread of the coronavirus. One load of wood will earn her US$1.50 — not enough to feed her family.To help the authorities respond to coronavirus, WFP is providing assistance to 29,000 vulnerable families.

In a country where 2 million people, or 40 percent of the total workforce, were already unemployed at the start of the year, restrictions adopted to contain the spread of COVID-19 are expected to take a heavy toll on employment — and on people’s ability to meet their basic food needs.‘The State of Food and Nutrition in the World 2020’, also known as the SOFI report, published this week by the Food and Agriculture Organization of the United Nations, estimates 690 million people went hungry in 2019 — by the end of this year, that figure is expected to rise by 100 million people.‘For four days we have had only one meal a day — my children would only have a little coffee in the morning and some rice in the afternoon.’WFP’s new estimates show that the number of hungry in the countries where it operates could increase to 270 million this year — up by 82 percent on pre-pandemic figures.In Honduras, small traders, daily labourers, subsistence farmers and families who rely on money-transfers from relatives working abroad are among the most affected; as are single mothers, elderly people, people with disabilities and those with chronic illnesses.Honduran authorities and WFP estimate that the loss of jobs and livelihoods caused by the pandemic has thrown 250,000 families across the country into food insecurity, meaning they do not know where their next meal will come from.“This pandemic will starve us,” says Yensi Velásquez, mother of two girls, aged six and four. I did not have more to give them.”