Tag: President Nayib Bukele

  • El Salvador cordons off entire territory to contain gangs

    El Salvador cordons off entire territory to contain gangs

    As part of the ongoing fight against gangs, El Salvadoran President Nayib Bukele has ringed the whole central Cabanas department with soldiers and police.

    A security fence has been built by 7,000 soldiers and 1,000 police officers, according to Mr. Bukele’s post.

    Stopping gang members from fleeing and disrupting their supply routes are the goals.

    Since a state of emergency was established in March 2022 due to an increase in gang-related murders, more over 70,000 alleged members have been detained.

    One of the world’s most hazardous nations is the impoverished Central American country.

    The dragnet of arrests has also resulted in the detention of thousands of individuals with no apparent connection to gang activities.

    Concerns have also been raised regarding a new initiative by the nation’s parliament to permit mass trials.

    President Bukele said that Cabanas, where gang members were hiding in the countryside, had “become the place with the largest number of terrorist cells” in a series of posts on X, formerly known as Twitter.

    He emphasised that until “all the criminals” were arrested, the siege would not be lifted.

    The president also asked visitors and locals to maintain their composure and go about their daily business.

    According to the AFP news agency, soldiers-loaded lorries were spotted in the streets of the nearby towns of Tejutepeque and Ilobaso on Tuesday.

    In the agricultural region of Cabanas, there are more than 160,000 residents.

    Just over 1,000 sq km (390 sq miles) are covered by it.

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  • El Salvador: Thousands of troops surround city in gang crackdown

    Around 10,000 troops have surrounded the city of Soyapango in El Salvador as part of a massive crackdown on gangs, President Nayib Bukele has announced.

    All roads leading to the city have been blocked, and special forces have been searching houses for gang members.

    Officers have also been stopping everyone attempting to leave the city and checking identity papers.

    The operation is part of a massive crackdown on gangs after a surge in violence earlier this year.

    The justice minister said 12 people had been arrested so far.

    Soyapango is one of El Salvador’s largest cities and is home to more than 290,000 people. The city – which sits just 13 km (8 miles) west of the capital San Salvador – has long been known as a hub for gang activity.

    “As of this moment, the municipality of Soyapango is totally surrounded,” President Bukele wrote on Twitter. “Extraction teams from the police and the army are tasked with extricating all the gang members still there one by one.”

    He added that ordinary people “have nothing to fear” and said that the crackdown was part of “an operation against criminals, not against honest citizens”.

    Images released by the government showed heavily armed troops clad in body armour and carrying assault rifles outside the city.

    One resident, Guadalupe Perez, told the AFP news agency that the raid had come as a welcome surprise.

    “They search you and ask for your identity papers to verify where you live, but that’s fine – it’s all for our safety,” the 53-year-old said.

    Since Mr Bukele announced a state of emergency in late March, more than 58,000 people have been jailed by authorities in the country of 6.5 million people.

    Rights groups have criticised the heavy handed nature of the crackdown, saying the measures, which allow police to arrest suspects without warrants, have led to arbitrary detentions.

    But Mr Bukele’s allies say the crackdown is necessary after a wave of homicides culminated with gangs being blamed for 62 murders in a single day on 26 March.

    A recent poll taken by the Central American University (UCA) found that 75.9 percent of Salvadorans approved of the state of emergency.

     

    Source: BBC