In 2025, the Ministry of Foreign Affairs and International Cooperation approved regulations on diplomatic and official passports, igniting a debate about how far public office privileges should extend in Honduras. The rules specify that former heads of the branches of government and former Foreign Ministry officials can keep their diplomatic passports for life, a benefit that also applies to their spouses.
The provision was approved through Agreement No. 001-SG-2025, signed on May 6, 2025 by then-Foreign Minister Eduardo Enrique Reina García and subsequently published in the official gazette La Gaceta on June 14, 2025. The document establishes the rules for the issuance and use of diplomatic and official passports, which are intended to facilitate the international travel of officials on government missions.
The matter has resurfaced after a recent announcement by the Ministry of Foreign Affairs calling on former officials to hand back these documents, a move that has pushed the breadth of the exemptions outlined in the regulations to the center of the discussion.
Scope of the Benefit for Former Officials
The regulations describe the diplomatic passport as a document granted by the Ministry of Foreign Affairs to officials performing official duties overseas, designed to ease their international travel and allow them to obtain diplomatic courtesies from other states.
Nevertheless, Article 13 of the regulations sets out a particular clause indicating that:
Former leaders of the government branches and their spouses, along with former secretaries and undersecretaries of state within the Ministry of Foreign Affairs and International Cooperation and their spouses, are granted the lifelong privilege of holding a diplomatic passport.
In administrative terms, this clause means that certain former officials may retain the document even after leaving office, with no subsequent obligation to return it.
Among the individuals who might qualify for this provision are the former President Xiomara Castro, the former head of the National Congress Luis Redondo, and the current President of the Supreme Court of Justice Rebeca Ráquel Obando.
The benefit also extends to former officials of the Ministry of Foreign Affairs, including Enrique Reina himself, as well as former Deputy Foreign Ministers Gerardo Torres, Cindy Larissa Rodríguez, and Zulmit Solemit Rivera Zúniga. According to the regulations, this privilege also extends to their spouses, broadening the scope of the benefit beyond those who directly held public office.
This provision received approval several weeks prior to Reina submitted his resignation on May 27, 2025, at which point he revealed his involvement in the electoral race as a vice-presidential contender on the slate led by Rixi Moncada, a representative of the LIBRE party.
Diplomatic Function and Institutional Use of the Document
According to the regulations released in La Gaceta, the diplomatic passport is granted to support the performance of representing the State overseas and to seek assistance and safeguards from authorities in foreign nations while carrying out official assignments.
Although possession of this document does not automatically imply diplomatic immunity, its use is traditionally associated with functions of state representation or specific missions authorized by the government.
According to international relations experts cited on several occasions by RCV, administrative practice in various countries stipulates that diplomatic passports are revoked once the term of office ends, with the aim of preventing the document from being used for personal purposes or outside the scope of official duties.
By adding a lifetime clause, a new modality is introduced into how the document is administratively regulated within the Honduran state apparatus.
Petition for Reinstatement and Managerial Strains
The debate surrounding the regulations intensified following a statement issued by the current Foreign Minister, Mireya de Agüero, in which former officials of the previous administration were asked to return the diplomatic and official passports issued during that administration.
The Ministry of Foreign Affairs set a deadline of March 31 for the surrender of these documents to the Passport Unit, citing the same regulation approved in 2025.
However, the regulations provide for explicit exceptions: former officials who hold the privilege of a lifetime diplomatic passport are not required to return them. This situation has created administrative tension, since while the general return of the documents is being requested, a specific group of former officials retains the benefit permanently.
The timing of the regulation’s approval and the foreign minister’s subsequent departure to join the electoral race has also been highlighted in public debate. The agreement was signed on May 6, 2025, less than three weeks before the official’s resignation to join the political campaign linked to the LIBRE party.
Various analysts have viewed this episode as contributing to a wider debate over the relationship between public office and administrative privileges, and the lifelong nature of the benefit—remaining valid even after the official no longer performs state duties—has prompted renewed scrutiny of how far such provisions should extend within public administration.
In a national context marked by debates on institutional framework, administrative transparency, and the use of public resources, the 2025 regulation has sparked a discussion about the role of diplomatic instruments and their relationship to the temporary exercise of state functions. The issue has also reignited the debate over whether the benefits associated with public office should continue after a term ends or be strictly limited to the period during which officials perform their duties within the government structure.
