Holy Gunsmoke
THE Spanish conquistadores came to America with courage, greed and fanatical faith. Their military heirs still have greed, machismo (a word conveying Latin American admiration for masculine qualities of toughness and physical courage) and belief in the holiness of their mission. On October 3rd—for the second time in eight days—this mixture was let loose on a long-suffering Caribbean country. The pattern of the military coup in Honduras, in which the army commander, Colonel Osvaldo López Arellano, threw out the elected president, Sr Ramón Villeda Morales, was strikingly similar to that which abruptly ended constitutional rule in the Dominican Republic the week before.
Discover more
Is Uruguay too stable for its own good?
The new president must deal with serious problems with growth, education and crime
Bolsonaro’s bid to regain Brazil’s presidency may end in prison
Brazilian police have accused some of his backers of involvement not just in a coup, but in an assassination plot
The mafia’s latest bonanza: salmon heists
Fish farming is big business in Chile. Stealing fish is, too
Parlacen, a bizarre parliament, is a refuge for bent politicians
A seat in the Central American body offers immunity from prosecution
Brazil courts China as its Musk feud erupts again
Xi Jinping, China’s leader, spies a chance to draw Brazil closer
Brazil’s gangsters have been getting into politics
They want friendly officials to help them launder money