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Bukele, emboldened by Trump, is arresting prominent critics

Bukele, emboldened by Trump, is arresting prominent critics

Washington Post15-06-2025

Police officers grabbed the shackled woman by each arm, leading her to the judge who would order her imprisonment.
'You won't silence me!' shouted Ruth López, a Bible in her hands, journalists crowding around her. 'What I want is a public trial! The people deserve to know!'
The arrest of López, a prominent lawyer in El Salvador who helped uncover alleged government corruption, has become emblematic of the increasing authoritarianism of President Nayib Bukele.
A judge on June 4 ordered López jailed pretrial for at least six months on charges of illegal enrichment, accusations her lawyers say are baseless. Days later, a second lawyer critical of Bukele, Enrique Anaya, was detained and accused of money laundering.
Now the lawyers are being held in the same police station, not knowing when — or if — they will be freed.
The arrests are part of an escalating crackdown by Bukele on the last bastion of dissent in a country where he already controls all state institutions, analysts and activists say. López's arrest and a new law targeting nongovernmental organizations have accelerated an exodus of civil society: In recent weeks, dozens of academics, lawyers, researchers, human rights defenders and journalists have fled the country.
Their departures resemble the flights of critics from autocratic regimes in Nicaragua and Venezuela, but with a key difference. This time, the United States isn't condemning the repression — it's deepening ties with its author.
The Trump administration, which is paying Bukele's government to imprison migrants deported from the United States, is praising his leadership and holding him up as a model for the region. Deputy Secretary of State Christopher Landau traveled to El Salvador this week as part of his first foreign trip, the purpose of which was to 'further strengthen diplomatic ties and cooperation.'
A State Department spokesperson said the U.S. is 'aware of the recent arrests of these Salvadoran nationals."
'The United States assesses that El Salvador will continue its strong commitment to investigate and prosecute cases involving embezzlement and other crimes against the people of El Salvador,' the spokesperson said.
Bukele, credited with dismantling the country's gangs and dramatically reducing violence in what was once one of the most dangerous nations in Latin America, is widely popular at home and throughout the region. But the self-styled 'world's coolest dictator' has pacified El Salvador in part by detaining more than 85,000 people, often without due process, access to a lawyer or a proper trial — while tightening his grip on the country's Legislative Assembly and courts.
Bukele has long been accused of human rights violations. But the recent arrests and threats, Noah Bullock said, are sending a more explicit, brazen message: 'You dissent and you will be punished.'
'It feels like overnight, El Salvador became an even more repressive regime,' said Bullock, executive director of Cristosal, a human rights organization where López works. 'A person who likes to make jokes about being a dictator is now embracing it.'
Bukele says he's unbothered by critics. 'I don't care if they call me a dictator,' he told Salvadoran lawmakers this month. 'I'd rather be called a dictator than see Salvadorans killed in the streets.'
But with each week, the threats have intensified. Last month, a group of journalists from El Salvador's premier investigative news source fled the country after getting word of possible arrest warrants against them. When journalists from that outlet, El Faro, prepared to reenter the country this week, according to the El Salvador press association, they learned police officers were planning to arrest them at the airport.
When hundreds of people gathered outside Bukele's house last month to protest an eviction order, he arrested a human rights advocate and evangelical pastor who had aided them.
He later accused nongovernmental organizations of 'manipulating' protesters and proposed a 'foreign agents' bill to tax foreign contributions to NGOs at 30 percent. The Salvadoran legislature, controlled by Bukele, approved it.
The European Union condemned the new law, saying it 'risks restricting civil society actors' access to funding, which is essential for their functioning and vital to any healthy democracy.' The bloc also expressed concern over the recent detentions of human rights defenders: 'The shrinking space for civil society risks undermining development and could negatively impact cooperation.'
Bukele responded with insults: 'El Salvador regrets that a bloc which is aging, overregulated, energy-dependent, tech-lagging, and led by unelected bureaucrats still insists on lecturing the rest of the world.'
Many of the researchers and human rights defenders who now feel targeted have previously worked closely with the United States, and some worked on projects that received U.S. aid that is now cut off. Some of those who have fled the country advocated for detainees in the country's expanding prison system, including the Venezuelans deported by the Trump administration to the megaprison known as CECOT. Others documented alleged corruption or human rights violations, and shared their findings at times with U.S. government agencies.
As director of Legal Humanitarian Aid, which advocates for people detained arbitrarily in El Salvador, human rights lawyer Ingrid Escobar is accustomed to being surveilled by the Bukele government. Last week, she learned she was on a list of possible targets for imminent arrest.
She had scheduled an urgent surgery in El Salvador for this week. But days before, she took her children, 11 and 9, and fled the country. If she did not, she feared, she might be detained and denied the medical treatment she needed.
'If I stayed in El Salvador,' she said, 'I could have died.'
Under previous U.S. administrations, one lawyer said, the U.S. Embassy would have been seen as an important partner in advocating for the release of López. 'In El Salvador,' the lawyer said, 'we're alone.' She spoke on the condition of anonymity out of concern for her family's safety.
López was detained at her home late at night on May 18, summoned outside by police officers who claimed they needed to tell her about a report of a car accident. Instead, they arrested her and accused her of embezzlement. That charge was later changed to illegal enrichment. The attorney general's office said the charges stemmed from her work with a magistrate and former electoral official, Eugenio Chicas, who was arrested in February on charges of illicit enrichment.
Bullock said López's role in that work didn't involve managing money. Her lawyer and Cristosal have said her arrest was retaliation for her work exposing government corruption.
López helped file criminal complaints against officials with the attorney general's office. In one, she alleged that money intended to support families during the covid-19 pandemic was sent to gang leaders. In another, she alleged corruption in the country's prison system. Because of this work, Cristosal fears she will be in danger if she is transferred to a jail under the custody of the prison system director she denounced.
On the day of López's hearing before a judge, Anaya, a constitutional lawyer, defended López and criticized the police who pushed her as she made her way through the crowd. 'They do it to prevent Ruth from speaking to the press, cowards!' he wrote on X. 'I will see the dictator and all his lackeys burn in hell.'
The following day, Bukele targeted those who he said 'spent the entire day publicly threatening anyone who supports or works for the government.'
Some of those critics, he said on X, had 'clear ties to criminals.'
'The days of impunity are over,' he threatened. 'Don't say you weren't warned.'
Anaya was arrested less than two days later. He was placed in a cell next to López's.

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Federal records show that more than 60 percent of convicted smugglers are U.S. citizens with little to no criminal history, and drivers are often low-level operatives in need of quick cash. After Hernandez moved to the Houston area, the two kept in touch. Both are from El Salvador. Hernandez is nearly a decade older than Abrego. Abrego crossed the southern border illegally in 2011 as a teenager, court records show, after he said he'd received multiple death threats from a gang. Immigration officers detained him for several months in 2019 after a Maryland police detective alleged he was an MS-13 gang member. The detective, who made the claim after an encounter with Abrego at a Home Depot parking lot, was later fired and indicted over misconduct in an unrelated case. Abrego's lawyers have said he was never a member of any gang. Abrego was released after an immigration judge ruled he should not be deported to El Salvador because his life could be threatened by the gangs that had sparked his decision to flee to the United States in the first place. Hernandez's criminal record dates at least to 2015, when police in Chesterfield County, Virginia, arrested him for public drunkenness and he paid a small fine. He has been arrested or in prison every year since, according to federal, state and county records reviewed by The Post. Houston police arrested him in 2016 for cocaine possession, but court records show prosecutors dismissed the case because of an issue with the search. Police in College Station, Texas, arrested him in 2017 for driving while intoxicated with a handgun in the car. He pleaded guilty to misdemeanor drunken driving and was punished with 60 days in jail and a $1,500 fine. He also forfeited the gun to the state. An immigration judge in Texas ordered him deported in February 2018 and he was sent to El Salvador that month. Two months later, U.S. Border Patrol agents arrested Hernandez after he waded across the Rio Grande into Texas. He pleaded guilty to entering the country illegally, a misdemeanor, and was sentenced to 30 days in prison. Federal court records show he was deported in May 2018. But Hernandez always seemed to find a way to get back in. By December of the next year, he had surfaced again, this time, in Mississippi. An officer had pulled over the vehicle he was riding in, and suspected Hernandez was helping smuggle migrants. The van held more passengers than seat belts and a large piece of cardboard was blocking the back window. Seven passengers were undocumented immigrants from Guatemala, Honduras, Mexico and El Salvador, and some admitted they had paid hundreds of dollars for rides north. Federal investigators said Hernandez admitted that he was in the United States illegally. He said he was running a business called 'Transs Express' that offered rides from Texas to South Carolina, Virginia, Maryland and Atlanta for $350 per person. He said he had started out as a ride-app driver in Maryland but there was too much competition, so he moved to Texas and started his own company. Hernandez sat in the front passenger seat, while his partner's unlicensed 18-year-old brother drove. The man told investigators Hernandez paid him $400 to help transport the migrants. Hernandez later pleaded guilty to illegally transporting migrants and was sentenced to 18 months in federal prison in 2020. It is unclear what happened after Hernandez finished that sentence, and Immigration and Customs Enforcement did not immediately respond to questions about his immigration history. On a December afternoon in 2022, Hernandez was 'highly intoxicated' and had just argued with his wife, according to Montgomery County Sheriff's Office records released in response to a public records request from The Post. Hernandez was riding around a Texas community known as The Woodlands with a friend at the wheel of a pickup truck. The friend told authorities Hernandez pulled out a silver handgun and, from the passenger seat, began to shoot out the window. It was before 4 p.m. and with neighbors nearby. Then, he fell asleep. Sheriff's deputies pulled over the truck. One deputy wrote that Hernandez was 'too intoxicated to give his side of the story.' Authorities said they recovered 11 spent shells and several rounds of live ammunition. 'Jose kept on saying he did nothing wrong,' the report said. Authorities charged him with deadly conduct with a firearm, a third-degree felony, in part because he was shooting in a residential neighborhood with a person only 50 feet away, and he pleaded guilty and was sentenced to two years in state prison. After his sentence was up, federal prosecutors charged Hernandez with reentering the United States illegally after having been convicted of a serious crime. That crime carries a potential sentence of up to 20 years and hefty fines. Hernandez asked the federal judge for leniency, noting he had already been in state prison for two years. 'All I want is to go back to my country and to go back to my family,' Hernandez said. U.S. District Judge Andrew Hanen asked why Hernandez had been in state prison. His lawyer recounted the shooting but noted that nobody had been injured. 'Oh,' the judge said. Hanen granted the prosecutor's request that Hernandez serve 30 months in federal prison. He was nearing the end of that sentence, and facing imminent deportation, when ICE officers wrongly deported Abrego in March. The Supreme Court ordered the administration to facilitate Abrego's return to the United States in April, around the same time that federal investigators heard about Hernandez and began interviewing him in prison. An indictment was filed under seal on May 21, and Abrego was brought back in early June. Abrego's defense lawyers have disparaged Hernandez as a 'snitch' and a 'two-time felon,' though records show he has been convicted of at least three felonies. Others caution that Hernandez may fear deportation to the same Salvadoran prison where Abrego ended up. U.S. Magistrate Judge Barbara D. Holmes ruled on June 22 that Abrego was eligible for release from criminal custody, saying the government had failed to prove that he posed a flight risk or a danger to the community. She wrote that she put 'little weight' on the claims of Hernandez and other cooperators based on their records and interest in avoiding deportation. But the government has given conflicting signals about what could happen to Abrego next. Federal officials have said Abrego will not be freed pending trial, and that he would be transferred into immigration custody. A government lawyer told the federal judge in Maryland, who first ordered Abrego's return, on Thursday that immigration authorities would initiate civil proceedings to remove him to a third country. Top Justice Department and White House officials, meanwhile, have insisted there is no chance they would remove him from the country before his criminal trial. Pointing out what they described as those 'directly contradictory statements,' Abrego's lawyers made an unusual request Friday: to keep him in criminal custody until July 16, when a judge has scheduled a hearing to more fully explore the issue. They noted that both departments had worked together to secure an indictment against Abrego. The departments had also worked together to free Hernandez. Steve Thompson and Jeremy Roebuck contributed to this report.

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