El Salvador Sends Troops, Police Into Streets Amid Killings
El Salvador Sends Troops, Police Into Streets Amid Killings
Combined patrols of soldiers and police fanned out across El Salvador's capital Thursday after a spate of killings left about 30 people dead in two days.

SAN SALVADOR, El Salvador: Combined patrols of soldiers and police fanned out across El Salvador’s capital Thursday after a spate of killings left about 30 people dead in two days.

El Salvadors homicide rate had dropped sharply from the violent days of the mid-2010s, when 15 or 20 killings a day were routine in the Central American country of 6.5 million people.

President Nayib Bukele ordered troops into the streets of San Salvador, where they used armored cars to block the exits of some poor neighborhoods, while police went door to door searching for members of the country’s notorious street gangs.

Bukele wrote in his Twitter account that we know there are dark forces who are working to return us to the past, but this administration is not going to allow it.

El Salvadors homicides have declined sharply since 2015, when more than 6,000 people were killed. But the country continues to have one of the worlds highest homicide rates, in large part due to gang violence.

Prior to this week, El Salvador had been averaging 3.8 homicides a a day. Before Bukele took office in 2018, the average was 9.2 killings a day.

Congresswoman Anabel Belloso of the leftist FMLN party said Bukele’s administration lacked a plan to deal with the violence and called the government’s security actions pure public relations.

The leader of Bukele’s New Ideas party in Congress, Rep. Christian Guevara, said in an interview with state-run television that the gangs and dark powers were angry about Bukele’s proposed foreign agents law.

That law would ban foreign donations or funding for any non-governmental groups that also carry out political activity in El Salvador. Bukele sent the bill this week to Congress, where his New Ideas party is dominant and is expected to pass the law.

The president accuses civic groups of helping organize protest marches against his government.

Groups that promote government transparency and accountability say Bukele has drawn the protests on himself by weakening democracy and the separation of powers.

Under the law, other civic groups would have to report foreign donations and account for them, and pay a 40% tax on them.

Disclaimer: This post has been auto-published from an agency feed without any modifications to the text and has not been reviewed by an editor

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