Kuwait Times

How Bukele became South America’s most popular leader

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SAN SALVADOR: Polling as the most popular leader in Latin America — possibly even the world — El Salvador’s Nayib Bukele has inspired calls for hard-handed tactics across a region tired of violence and losing faith in democracy.

Despite accusation­s he is abusing human rights and trampling on the constituti­on to consolidat­e power, Bukele’s crackdown on drug gangs has won him the adoration of a nation and the esteem of leaders hoping to emulate his example ... and voter support. Bukele, 42, enjoys approval ratings around 90 percent according to numerous polls, ahead of elections Sunday he is expected to win hands down.

How did he do it?

After a weekend of particular­ly bloody gang violence, a parliament loyal to Bukele decreed a state of emergency in March 2022 that suspended the need for arrest warrants, among other civil liberties. Under the provision, authoritie­s have rounded up nearly 80,000 suspected gangsters, many of them locked away in a prison — the largest in the Americas — that Bukele had specially built.

The complex is a major target for rights observers due to allegation­s of inhumane conditions and widespread abuses, including the detention of minors and torture. But despite these concerns, and fears that many innocent people have gotten caught up in Bukele’s dragnet, El Salvador last year recorded its lowest homicide rate in three decades.

This prompted Bukele to boast it was now “officially the safest country in all of Latin America.” It was not long ago one of the deadliest. The young, social-media-savvy Bukele’s online presence has also helped bolster his popularity. He has 5.8 million followers on X.

Will others follow?

Presidents Xiomara Castro of Honduras and Daniel Noboa of Ecuador — countries beset by violence perpetrate­d by gangs with links to powerful internatio­nal cartels — have both evoked the Bukele example. And people in countries as far away as Chile and Argentina, where crime is seen as a growing problem, have been calling for a tougher government approach echoing El Salvador.

There is even a term for it: Bukelizati­on. But Bukele’s success is not only down to his gang war. “It’s the failure of what preceded,” analyst Michael Shifter of the Inter-American Dialogue thinktank in Washington told AFP. “It’s the sclerosis of the political class. A political class that became completely removed from society and what its demands are and what its needs are.”

Last year, only 48 percent of Latin Americans said they believed democracy was the best form of government, according to the Latinobaro­metro polling agency, based in Chile. In 2010 support for democracy stood at 63 percent. In times of insecurity, “all

people in Latin America like authoritar­ian narratives,” said Ana Maria Mendez Dardon, director for Central America for the Washington Office on Latin America, an NGO promoting human rights and justice.

Can it last?

Bukele represents a break from a recent Latin American trend of voting out incumbents. Given that he has delivered on his promise to reduce violence, voters “are willing to make the tradeoff,” said Shifter. “They realize they may be losing some liberty and they realize that he’s going for a second term that’s not constituti­onal, but they are willing to accept that as long as they get some benefits,” he said.

“And they’re getting benefits in terms of being able to take their kids to the park or whatever it is without constant

fear.” El Salvador’s constituti­on does not allow successive presidenti­al terms, but a Bukele-stacked Supreme Court has allowed him to run.

In the longer term, analysts expect the country’s economic woes will turn voters away, and point to migration numbers that have remained high. “The honeymoon will end,” Latinobaro­metro director Marta Lagos told AFP. “There’s a bit of an idealized view of what Bukele has done. The Latin American who wants to live in El Salvador does not know the living conditions in El Salvador,” she said.

According to the UN’s OCHA humanitari­an organizati­on, more than a quarter of the country’s 6.3 million people live in poverty. Bukele may also not be able to indefinite­ly hold out against gangs with ties to powerful, multinatio­nal cartels.

 ?? ?? MEJICANOS, El Salvador: An aerial view of a mural at the Zacamil apartment complex depicting Salvadoran President Nayib Bukele is seen on January 26, 2024. — AFP
MEJICANOS, El Salvador: An aerial view of a mural at the Zacamil apartment complex depicting Salvadoran President Nayib Bukele is seen on January 26, 2024. — AFP

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