Countries: Mexico, Haiti, Honduras, Nicaragua, Venezuela (Bolivarian Republic of) Source: UN Office for the Coordination of Humanitarian Affairs Please refer to the attached Infographic. KEY FIGURES 5K people displaced since 1 June due to violence in Port-au-Prince, Haiti 1.8M people to face Crisis or Emergency food insecurity between April-July in Honduras REGIONAL: PACIFIC HURRICANE SEASON Tropical Storm Boris formed on 8 June off the coast of Guerrero, Mexico, bringing heavy rain and a risk of life-threatening flooding and mudslides across Guerrero and Oaxaca. After making landfall on 9 June, authorities reported one death, two people missing in Colima and localized damage due to flash flooding and storm surge along the southern Pacific coastline of Colima, Guerrero, Oaxaca and Chiapas states. On the same day, Tropical Storm Cristina formed approximately 160 km southwest of Managua, Nicaragua, tracking north-northwest along the Pacific coast with forecast rainfall of 100 to 300mm across Nicaragua, Honduras, El Salvador and Guatemala. The simultaneous formation of two named storms early in the season is consistent with El Niño conditions, which tend to fuel cyclone activity in the eastern Pacific. VENEZUELA: RAINY SEASON Between 5 and 10 June, sustained rainfall associated with tropical waves has affected various regions across Venezuela, particularly rural and riverine areas. While the impact remains limited, the situation in Amazonas state stands out. In Alto Orinoco municipality, the overflow of the Orinoco River has caused flooding in homes and infrastructure, service disruptions, as well as increased exposure to water-borne and vector-borne diseases. Localized flooding is also reported in Apure state (Páez municipality) and Delta Amacuro state (Tucupita municipality). In other states, such as Sucre and Bolívar, impacts are concentrated in urban areas and in the provision of basic services. Authorities, in coordination at different levels, have implemented preventive and immediate response actions, while continuing to monitor the situation. Meanwhile, humanitarian partners are conducting coordination and preparedness actions. HAITI: VIOLENCE & DISPLACEMENT Waves of violence continue to drive displacement in Haiti. Since 1 June, armed clashes across several neighborhoods in Port-au-Prince - including Village de Dieu, Cité de l’Éternel, Cité Plus, and Martissant–Bréard–Saint-Bernadette - have displaced an estimated 5,054 individuals (1,585 households). More than half of those displaced are seeking refuge in eight displacement sites, most of which were already hosting populations prior to these events, and one newly established in response to the situation. The remaining found shelter with host families, underscoring continued reliance on already stretched community networks. All movements remain contained within the municipality as monitoring continues. HONDURAS: FOOD INSECURITY An Integrated Food Security Phase Classification (IPC) analysis published on 10 June projects that 1.8 million people, or 18 per cent of the analyzed population, will face Crisis or Emergency food insecurity (IPC Phase 3 or above) between April and July 2026, up from 1.4 million between November 2025 and March 2026. The deterioration is driven by seasonal depletion of household food stocks, above average food prices and rising global fuel and agricultural input costs. The highest severity is expected in Gracias a Dios and Lempira, while Cortés, the Distrito Central and Choluteca have the largest affected populations in absolute terms. Conditions are projected to worsen in five additional departments, including Choluteca, Valle and El Paraíso. Food insecurity is expected to remain similarly elevated through October 2026, with a growing probability of El Niño conditions adding further uncertainty.