newsinsightplus.com 180degree18th February 4, 2024 0 Comments BBC HomepageSkip to contentAccessibility HelpYour accountLiveNotificationsHomeNewsSportWeatheriPlayerSoundsBitesizeMore menuMore menuSearch BBCHomeNewsSportWeatheriPlayerSoundsBitesizeCBBCCBeebiesFoodClose menuBBC NewsMenuHomeIsrael-Gaza warCost of LivingWar in UkraineClimateUKWorldBusinessPoliticsCultureMoreTechScienceHealthFamily & EducationIn PicturesNewsbeatBBC VerifyDisabilityWorldAfricaAsiaAustraliaEuropeLatin AmericaMiddle EastUS & CanadaEl Salvador’s president eyes re-election on back of gang crackdownPublished6 hours agoShareclose panelShare pageCopy linkAbout sharingImage caption, Francisco Villegas travelled back from his home in Pennsylvania just to vote for Nayib BukeleBy Will GrantBBC News, San SalvadorThere was no doubting Francisco Villegas’ political colours as he stepped off his flight into El Salvador. Draped in a flag bearing President Nayib Bukele’s face, he was dressed in light blue – the colour of the ruling party, Nuevas Ideas.”We’re going to win!” he yelled, to cheers and applause from a small crowd of people waiting for their relatives outside the arrivals lounge.Like thousands of Salvadorans living abroad, Francisco is such a staunch supporter of El Salvador’s controversial president that he travelled back from his home in Pennsylvania specifically to vote for him.”Quite honestly, in the past I didn’t care who won,” he says. “But I’ve seen the changes in five years and I thought I’d make the effort to come and support him. It’s been a 180-degree shift. I feel so safe here now.”He’s far from the only one who feels that way.Mass arrests bring calm to El Salvador but at what price?The abandoned gang houses being returned to localsEl Salvador region ‘under siege’ to hem in gangsIn the run up to Sunday’s election, Mr Bukele’s campaign spots have featured bereaved relatives of victims of the country’s two main gangs, the MS-13 and the 18th Street gang. In tearful testimony, they thank the president for his ruthless military-led crackdown which has turned El Salvador from one of the most dangerous nations in the world to one of Latin America’s safest.”Never again”, reads the slogan.It’s a potent message in a country which has suffered as much as El Salvador and its implication – that a vote for the president’s rivals would see the gangs take a foothold again – is likely to see Mr Bukele re-elected by a huge margin. The latest polls have his main rivals receiving barely 12% of the vote between them. Constructor, Armando Grande, used to faithfully vote for one of those rivals – the left-wing FMLN party. Such has been the transformation he’s witnessed in the neighbourhoods where he works, this time he plans to vote for President Bukele. “What we thought couldn’t be done in decades, he’s achieved in five years. I can only rate his first term as ten out of ten,” he says.Image source, Lisette Lemus Image caption, Armando Grande wants the president to focus on the nation’s economic needs in a second termThe biggest and most glaring problem in the country was security.”We were drowning,” Armando remembers. Now the gang issue has been seemingly brought under control, he’d like to see the president focus on the Central American nation’s urgent economic needs in his second term.The government says its investments in Bitcoin – in which El Salvador declared the cryptocurrency legal tender – are now in the black. Is El Salvador’s Bitcoin bet paying off?El Salvador country profileBut Armando readily admits President Bukele’s Bitcoin experiment hasn’t caught on with the general public or most businesses and would like to see him take more traditional steps to tackle the cost of living.So it remains security – both the newfound sense of peace and the nagging fear that the bad old days might return – that will prompt most Bukele voters to the polls.Critics, though, see a slide into authoritarianism and autocracy. “To begin with, his re-election is unconstitutional”, says Alejandro Diaz of the human rights NGO, Tutela Legal. Mr Bukele says the constitutional court has ruled that he can stand for re-election as long as he doesn’t exercise the role of president for six months before a second term.Critics say he appointed loyalists to the court in order to reach a favourable ruling.”One man’s subjective decisions are going to dominate the three branches of power,” Alejandro Diaz says of a second Bukele term.Image source, Lisette Lemus Image caption, Alejandro Diaz believes the president’s re-election will be unconstitutional”The control will intensify with no clear division between the powers of the state” he warns, saying that “through manipulation and propaganda, the majority seem to be comfortable with the erosion of their democracy in El Salvador”.Tutela Legal represents around 500 families who say their relatives have been unjustly swept up in the mass arrests as part of President Bukele’s gang crackdown. Some 75,000 people have been detained since the “state of exception” – an emergency measure granting draconian powers to the police and military – was imposed in March 2022.Salvadoran and international human rights organisations claim many thousands of them have no discernible link to gang crime. Others were forced to collaborate with the gangs, either as lookouts or to hide guns or drugs for them, out of fear of their lives.Bukele voter, Armando, has limited sympathy for such cases. “It’s impossible to avoid some innocent people getting caught up in it,” he concedes. “But it’s a necessary evil to fix this huge problem that we had.”That’s not how Doña Berta Silvestre sees it.She lives in Colonia Montelimar, a neighbourhood that until recently was controlled by the fearsome MS-13. Her two daughters and her grandson were arrested for “unlawful association” leaving her to bring up four small granddaughters almost singlehandedly.Thousands moved to El Salvador mega-prisonEl Salvador deploys 10,000 troops in gang crackdownImage source, Lisette Lemus Image caption, Berta Silvestre is scared about how another five years of Nayib Bukele may impact her family members’ trialsBerta insists her children were street vendors who were not involved in gang activity.”I’ve had no contact with them in almost two years,” she weeps. “I ask how they’re doing but the authorities don’t tell me anything.” Berta is frantic with worry about their conditions and treatment inside jail.She’s been told it could be years before her daughters get a proper trial. Meanwhile, she fears what another five years of Nayib Bukele as president might mean for her beleaguered family.”They say things are going to get even harder, especially for the relatives of those in prison,” she sobs.Outside the National Palace in San Salvador, workmen are erecting a stage and a huge sound system ahead of Nayib Bukele’s planned victory party.In just five years, this 42-year-old media-savvy leader has become a point of reference for conservative leaders across the Americas trying to burnish their credentials as “tough on crime”.From Argentina to the US, right-wing politicians have pointed to Bukele’s model as the best way to tackle gangs.He has undoubtedly changed the face of this impoverished, conflicted nation – and voters adore him for it. Rarely in Central America has a president been so clear of his rivals before a single vote was even cast.Related TopicsEl SalvadorNayib BukeleMore on this storyThe abandoned gang houses being returned to localsPublished29 May 2023Is El Salvador’s Bitcoin bet paying off?Published6 December 2023El Salvador region ‘under siege’ to hem in gangsPublished2 August 2023El Salvador country profilePublished3 April 2023Top StoriesLive. US and UK launch strikes on Iran-backed Houthi targets in YemenBan children’s access to social media apps – Brianna’s mumPublished52 minutes agoNo more easy deals for Russian convicts freed to fightPublished6 hours agoFeaturesCan Musk’s Neuralink brain chip really change the world?The Papers: ‘We’ll hold Iran to account’ and O’Neill ‘steps into history’Did bodybuilding bring on my early perimenopause?How Imran Khan plans to win an election from jailI almost died up a mountain scattering dad’s ashesThey fled as lava spilled into town – and they may never returnDoes Germany’s economy need more than a cup of coffee?One of worst halves of my coaching career – GatlandAttributionSportHistoric moment stirs painful memories and hope for change in NIElsewhere on the BBCA Scottish wild swimming road-trip!Julie Wilson Nimmo and Greg Hemphill take the plunge at Scotland’s breathtaking wild swimming spotsAttributioniPlayer’I never tried to be famous…it was accidental’Michael Parkinson with guests Ricky Gervais, Michael Palin and Kate AdieAttributioniPlayer’I smashed all my trophies’Bradley Wiggins opens up about his mental health and imposter syndromeAttributioniPlayerBritish television’s greatest double actEric and Ernie share their remarkable journey through TV appearances, rare radio material and BBC archivesAttributioniPlayerMost Read1Ban children’s access to social media apps – Brianna’s mum2No more easy deals for Russian convicts freed to fight3I almost died up a mountain scattering dad’s ashes4’We’ll hold Iran to account’ and O’Neill ‘steps into history’5They fled as lava spilled into town – and they may never return6Did bodybuilding bring on my early perimenopause?7Video released of search for Clapham attack suspect8Dua Lipa, Billie Eilish and SZA set to star at Grammy Awards9Protesters climbing war memorials could face jail10Angela Rippon ‘stopped breathing’ on Strictly tour [ad_1] President Nayib Bukele is far ahead of rivals in polls – but not all voters are convinced. 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newsinsightplus.com 180degree18th February 4, 2024 0 Comments BBC HomepageSkip to contentAccessibility HelpYour accountLiveNotificationsHomeNewsSportWeatheriPlayerSoundsBitesizeMore menuMore menuSearch BBCHomeNewsSportWeatheriPlayerSoundsBitesizeCBBCCBeebiesFoodClose menuBBC NewsMenuHomeIsrael-Gaza warCost of LivingWar in UkraineClimateUKWorldBusinessPoliticsCultureMoreTechScienceHealthFamily & EducationIn PicturesNewsbeatBBC VerifyDisabilityWorldAfricaAsiaAustraliaEuropeLatin AmericaMiddle EastUS & CanadaEl Salvador’s president eyes re-election on back of gang crackdownPublished6 hours agoShareclose panelShare pageCopy linkAbout sharingImage caption, Francisco Villegas travelled back from his home in Pennsylvania just to vote for Nayib BukeleBy Will GrantBBC News, San SalvadorThere was no doubting Francisco Villegas’ political colours as he stepped off his flight into El Salvador. Draped in a flag bearing President Nayib Bukele’s face, he was dressed in light blue – the colour of the ruling party, Nuevas Ideas.”We’re going to win!” he yelled, to cheers and applause from a small crowd of people waiting for their relatives outside the arrivals lounge.Like thousands of Salvadorans living abroad, Francisco is such a staunch supporter of El Salvador’s controversial president that he travelled back from his home in Pennsylvania specifically to vote for him.”Quite honestly, in the past I didn’t care who won,” he says. “But I’ve seen the changes in five years and I thought I’d make the effort to come and support him. It’s been a 180-degree shift. I feel so safe here now.”He’s far from the only one who feels that way.Mass arrests bring calm to El Salvador but at what price?The abandoned gang houses being returned to localsEl Salvador region ‘under siege’ to hem in gangsIn the run up to Sunday’s election, Mr Bukele’s campaign spots have featured bereaved relatives of victims of the country’s two main gangs, the MS-13 and the 18th Street gang. In tearful testimony, they thank the president for his ruthless military-led crackdown which has turned El Salvador from one of the most dangerous nations in the world to one of Latin America’s safest.”Never again”, reads the slogan.It’s a potent message in a country which has suffered as much as El Salvador and its implication – that a vote for the president’s rivals would see the gangs take a foothold again – is likely to see Mr Bukele re-elected by a huge margin. The latest polls have his main rivals receiving barely 12% of the vote between them. Constructor, Armando Grande, used to faithfully vote for one of those rivals – the left-wing FMLN party. Such has been the transformation he’s witnessed in the neighbourhoods where he works, this time he plans to vote for President Bukele. “What we thought couldn’t be done in decades, he’s achieved in five years. I can only rate his first term as ten out of ten,” he says.Image source, Lisette Lemus Image caption, Armando Grande wants the president to focus on the nation’s economic needs in a second termThe biggest and most glaring problem in the country was security.”We were drowning,” Armando remembers. Now the gang issue has been seemingly brought under control, he’d like to see the president focus on the Central American nation’s urgent economic needs in his second term.The government says its investments in Bitcoin – in which El Salvador declared the cryptocurrency legal tender – are now in the black. Is El Salvador’s Bitcoin bet paying off?El Salvador country profileBut Armando readily admits President Bukele’s Bitcoin experiment hasn’t caught on with the general public or most businesses and would like to see him take more traditional steps to tackle the cost of living.So it remains security – both the newfound sense of peace and the nagging fear that the bad old days might return – that will prompt most Bukele voters to the polls.Critics, though, see a slide into authoritarianism and autocracy. “To begin with, his re-election is unconstitutional”, says Alejandro Diaz of the human rights NGO, Tutela Legal. Mr Bukele says the constitutional court has ruled that he can stand for re-election as long as he doesn’t exercise the role of president for six months before a second term.Critics say he appointed loyalists to the court in order to reach a favourable ruling.”One man’s subjective decisions are going to dominate the three branches of power,” Alejandro Diaz says of a second Bukele term.Image source, Lisette Lemus Image caption, Alejandro Diaz believes the president’s re-election will be unconstitutional”The control will intensify with no clear division between the powers of the state” he warns, saying that “through manipulation and propaganda, the majority seem to be comfortable with the erosion of their democracy in El Salvador”.Tutela Legal represents around 500 families who say their relatives have been unjustly swept up in the mass arrests as part of President Bukele’s gang crackdown. Some 75,000 people have been detained since the “state of exception” – an emergency measure granting draconian powers to the police and military – was imposed in March 2022.Salvadoran and international human rights organisations claim many thousands of them have no discernible link to gang crime. Others were forced to collaborate with the gangs, either as lookouts or to hide guns or drugs for them, out of fear of their lives.Bukele voter, Armando, has limited sympathy for such cases. “It’s impossible to avoid some innocent people getting caught up in it,” he concedes. “But it’s a necessary evil to fix this huge problem that we had.”That’s not how Doña Berta Silvestre sees it.She lives in Colonia Montelimar, a neighbourhood that until recently was controlled by the fearsome MS-13. Her two daughters and her grandson were arrested for “unlawful association” leaving her to bring up four small granddaughters almost singlehandedly.Thousands moved to El Salvador mega-prisonEl Salvador deploys 10,000 troops in gang crackdownImage source, Lisette Lemus Image caption, Berta Silvestre is scared about how another five years of Nayib Bukele may impact her family members’ trialsBerta insists her children were street vendors who were not involved in gang activity.”I’ve had no contact with them in almost two years,” she weeps. “I ask how they’re doing but the authorities don’t tell me anything.” Berta is frantic with worry about their conditions and treatment inside jail.She’s been told it could be years before her daughters get a proper trial. Meanwhile, she fears what another five years of Nayib Bukele as president might mean for her beleaguered family.”They say things are going to get even harder, especially for the relatives of those in prison,” she sobs.Outside the National Palace in San Salvador, workmen are erecting a stage and a huge sound system ahead of Nayib Bukele’s planned victory party.In just five years, this 42-year-old media-savvy leader has become a point of reference for conservative leaders across the Americas trying to burnish their credentials as “tough on crime”.From Argentina to the US, right-wing politicians have pointed to Bukele’s model as the best way to tackle gangs.He has undoubtedly changed the face of this impoverished, conflicted nation – and voters adore him for it. Rarely in Central America has a president been so clear of his rivals before a single vote was even cast.Related TopicsEl SalvadorNayib BukeleMore on this storyThe abandoned gang houses being returned to localsPublished29 May 2023Is El Salvador’s Bitcoin bet paying off?Published6 December 2023El Salvador region ‘under siege’ to hem in gangsPublished2 August 2023El Salvador country profilePublished3 April 2023Top StoriesLive. US and UK launch strikes on Iran-backed Houthi targets in YemenBan children’s access to social media apps – Brianna’s mumPublished52 minutes agoNo more easy deals for Russian convicts freed to fightPublished6 hours agoFeaturesCan Musk’s Neuralink brain chip really change the world?The Papers: ‘We’ll hold Iran to account’ and O’Neill ‘steps into history’Did bodybuilding bring on my early perimenopause?How Imran Khan plans to win an election from jailI almost died up a mountain scattering dad’s ashesThey fled as lava spilled into town – and they may never returnDoes Germany’s economy need more than a cup of coffee?One of worst halves of my coaching career – GatlandAttributionSportHistoric moment stirs painful memories and hope for change in NIElsewhere on the BBCA Scottish wild swimming road-trip!Julie Wilson Nimmo and Greg Hemphill take the plunge at Scotland’s breathtaking wild swimming spotsAttributioniPlayer’I never tried to be famous…it was accidental’Michael Parkinson with guests Ricky Gervais, Michael Palin and Kate AdieAttributioniPlayer’I smashed all my trophies’Bradley Wiggins opens up about his mental health and imposter syndromeAttributioniPlayerBritish television’s greatest double actEric and Ernie share their remarkable journey through TV appearances, rare radio material and BBC archivesAttributioniPlayerMost Read1Ban children’s access to social media apps – Brianna’s mum2No more easy deals for Russian convicts freed to fight3I almost died up a mountain scattering dad’s ashes4’We’ll hold Iran to account’ and O’Neill ‘steps into history’5They fled as lava spilled into town – and they may never return6Did bodybuilding bring on my early perimenopause?7Video released of search for Clapham attack suspect8Dua Lipa, Billie Eilish and SZA set to star at Grammy Awards9Protesters climbing war memorials could face jail10Angela Rippon ‘stopped breathing’ on Strictly tour [ad_1] President Nayib Bukele is far ahead of rivals in polls – but not all voters are convinced. Continue reading