Honduras
The original Banana Republic, a byword for corruption and
poverty, Honduras is all too often overlooked by foreign
tourists. Many of those who do make it here head straight for the
ruins of Copán , one of the finest Maya sites in the region.
Some even miss that, in their rush to get to the palm-fringed
beaches and clear Caribbean waters of the Bay Islands .
Beyond these prime tourist sites, however, is a land of inspiring,
often untouched natural beauty.
The second-largest country in Central America after Nicaragua,
Honduras sprawls from the Atlantic to the Pacific coast, from
Caribbean flatlands through the cooler mountainous interior, and
south to the sun-baked shores of the Golfo de Fonseca. West to
east, the forested highlands on the border with Guatemala give way
to the vast, undeveloped savannas and wetlands of the Mosquitia.
While eco-tourism is a relatively new concept here, more and more
Hondurans are becoming aware of the role the country's extensive
network of national parks and reserves plays in protecting
irreplaceable natural resources. Almost a quarter of Honduran
territory is protected, but a lack of funding and growing pressure
on the land mean this status often exists more on paper than in
reality. Nonetheless, the remoter reaches of the parks still host
an astonishing array of flora and fauna, amid some of the finest
stretches of virgin cloudforest and tropical forest
in Central America.
Honduras's close alliance with the US, while preventing the
bitter conflicts that beset its neighbours in the 1980s, has not
alleviated the country's acute social and economic problems
. After Nicaragua, this is Latin America's poorest nation, with
levels of deprivation that can be disturbing to witness: some
eighty percent of Hondurans live in poverty and forty percent are
unable to read or write. Exacerbating the pressure on economic and
environmental resources is a rapidly growing population, now
approaching seven million, much of it absorbed by the
ever-increasing shantytowns ringing the main cities.
It is in the cities that the pressures are most evident: life is
fast and harsh and social intercourse is conducted at times with
gratuitous abruptness. Move out into the rural areas, however, and
the open generosity and genuine friendliness displayed by those who
have little else are what leave an enduring impression. On the
north coast, where the population is more ethnically diverse, the
heat and sunshine combine to create a way of life that's more
Caribbean than Latin
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