Pittsburgh Post-Gazette

War on gangs forges new El Salvador, but the price is steep

- By Megan Janetsky and Fernanda Pesce

SOYAPANGO, El Salvador — For the family of 44year-old Maritza Pacheco, opening a corner shop outside their home four months agowas a small miracle.

Ms. Pacheco had lived like many in El Salvador’s capital: in constant panic. Warring gangs – MS-13 and Barrio 18 – would send gunfire ringing out over flimsy tinsheet homes, terrorizin­g and extorting poor communitie­s like hers.

Her family isolated themselves, determined not to get sucked into the lawlessnes­s around them until the gangs began closing in on her teenage

son. Early last year, Ms. Pacheco paid to have him and a sister smuggled to the

U.S.

But over the past year, El Salvador has undergone a radical transforma­tion since President Nayib Bukele — the self-described “world’s coolest dictator” — suspended constituti­onal rights and started an all-out offensiveo­n the gangs.

Mr. Bukele has imprisoned over 65,000 of the nation’s 6.3 million people, packing thousands inside a “mega-prison.”

Gang presence has dwindled, and bloodshed across thecountry has faded away.

Ms. Pacheco and her daughter no longer sell produce in secret to avoid gang payments. Fruit vendors and food deliveries that wouldn’t dare to enter their neighborho­od started rolling through. Then came banks, one which gave them a loan to open their shop. Selling candies, sodas and pastries to neighborho­od kids, the family went from subsisting to saving for the future.

“People come and stay sometimes until 12 or 1 in the morning,” she said. “And it’s so safe that we can stay open.”

Salvadoran­s cherish small new freedoms: traversing the capital at night, ordering pizzadeliv­ery, doing aerobics ina park.

For others, the transforma­tion comes at a steep price.

Large swaths of San Salvador remain militarize­d, and officers push into homes to strip-search families. Tens of thousands of children have been separated from their parents. The crackdown has fueled a flood of reports of human rights abuses. And for many, fear of the gangs has been replaced by fear of the very government claiming to protect them.

“The long term question, and what I fear, is: Is this going to become a police state?” said Michael Paarlberg, a political science professor at Virginia Commonweal­th

University researchin­g El Salvador.

Mr. Bukele’s government declined requests by The Associated Press for interviews, comment or access to the prisons.

Mr. Bukele’s administra­tion has wielded a robust disinforma­tion machine, suppressed critics and journalist­s. Nowhere is that more evident than with prisons, likened to torture chambers by two government officials and a former prisoner who spoke to the AP on condition of anonymity, fearing retributio­n by the government and gangs.

At least 90 have died in custody, the government said in November. Since, it has been tight-lipped about death counts.

Little is known about the facilities outside highly produced videos with actionmovi­e soundtrack­s that Mr. Bukele plasters on social media showing images of tattooed men filling his “mega-carcel.”

“This will be their new house, where they will live for decades, mixed together, unable to do any more harm to the population,” Mr. Bukele tweeted.

Security officials are under great pressure to boost arrests, which can earn extra Christmas vacation days, said one of the officials who spoke to AP — who has worked for decades in gangcontro­lled zones.

“Many innocents were detained,” said the officer. “We’ve committed crimes.”

Nearly one in six people who have been imprisoned are innocent, estimates the country’s police union tracking detentions. Local rights group Cristosal documented 3,344 cases of human rights violations in the first 11 months of the gang crackdown.

Yet the president’s approval rating has soared to 91%, according to a March poll by LPG Data. So, too, has approval for the crackdown.

“The president is doing what no one has been able to. You know there are a lot of innocent people caught in the middle,” said Jorge Guzman, a pastor in Ms. Pacheco’s neighborho­od. “But you accept what’s happening as something that had to happen.”

Mr. Bukele has harnessed his approval to further consolidat­e control. “It’s a model that sells a kind of punitive populism to gain popularity and stay in power,” said Abraham Abrego, a leader of Cristosal.

The government has extended Mr. Bukele’s state of emergency a dozen times. In September, he announced a run for reelection despite El Salvador’s constituti­on banning presidents from consecutiv­e terms.

When asked what she thought of Mr. Bukele, Ms. Pacheco, the corner shop owner, responded: “I’ve never voted in my life. Now, I would vote for him.”

Even as Mr. Bukele has dealt a historic blow to the gangs, they quietly lurk in the areas they once controlled, according to locals andgovernm­ent personnel.

Gisel was 17 when authoritie­s came for her parents chasing an anonymous tip. She and her 8-year-old brother, Brayan, lived quietly in a coffee-growing town, playing soccer on weekends with her constructi­on worker father, who she said was never involved with gangs.

She spoke to AP on condition that her family’s full name not be used out of fear of retributio­n.

Six months ago, she returned from class to find her community teeming with soldiers and her parents sitting handcuffed. It was the last theyheard of their parents.

 ?? Associated Press ?? National Civil Police patrol the Vista al Lago neighborho­od, formerly under the control of the Mara Salvatruch­a gang, in Ilopango, El Salvador, on March 2.
Associated Press National Civil Police patrol the Vista al Lago neighborho­od, formerly under the control of the Mara Salvatruch­a gang, in Ilopango, El Salvador, on March 2.

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