Stabroek News

El Salvador re-elects attorney general who fed friction with U.S.

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SAN SALVADOR, (Reuters) - El Salvador's Congress on Wednesday re-elected Rodolfo Delgado to serve for three more years as attorney general, despite U.S. concerns about his appointmen­t and his decision to end a U.S.-backed anticorrup­tion accord.

In May, Delgado was appointed by lawmakers from President Nayib Bukele's ruling party after Congress removed his predecesso­r for having supposed links to the rightwing opposition Nationalis­t Republican Alliance (ARENA).

Congress then also removed five judges on El Salvador's supreme court https://www.reuters.com/world/americas/bukelealli­es-seek-judges-ousternew-congress-convenesel-salvador-2021-05-02, widely viewed as some of the few checks still remaining on Bukele's power. That prompted U.S. Secretary of State Antony Blinken to express his concern at events.

Bukele quickly congratula­ted Delgado on his reappointm­ent after 66 of 84 lawmakers voted to keep him on three more years.

In June, Delgado said El Salvador was pulling out of an anti-corruption accord with the Organizati­on of American States (OAS) in protest at an OAS decision to take on as an adviser a member of ARENA who has been under investigat­ion.

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