Excerpts:
An internationally acclaimed digital news outlet in El Salvador said Monday that the administration of Salvadoran President Nayib Bukele is preparing to arrest a number of its journalists following the publication of an interview with two former gang leaders who shed new light on a power-sharing agreement with the U.S.-backed leader and self-described “world’s coolest dictator.”
“A reliable source in El Salvador told El Faro that the Bukele-controlled Attorney General’s Office is preparing at least seven arrest warrants for members of El Faro,” the outlet reported. “The source reached out following the publication of an interview with two former leaders of the 18th Street Revolucionarios on Bukele’s yearslong relationship to gangs.”
“If carried out, the warrants are the first time in decades that prosecutors seek to press charges against individual journalists for their journalistic labors,” El Faro added.
As El Faro reported:
At the heart of the threat of arrests is irony: El Faro was only able to interview the two Revolucionarios because they escaped El Salvador with the complicity of Bukele.
One, who goes by “Liro Man,” recounts that he was taken to Guatemala, through a blind spot in the Salvadoran border, by Bukele gang negotiator Carlos Marroquín; the other, Carlos Cartagena, or “Charli,” was arrested on a warrant in April 2022, early in the state of exception, but quickly released after the police received a call at the station and backed off.
Meanwhile, tens of thousands of Salvadorans were being rounded up without due process, on charges of belonging to gangs.
The video interview explains the dichotomy: For years, Salvadoran gang leaders cut covert deals with the entourage of Nayib Bukele. In their interview with El Faro, the two Revolucionarios say the FMLN party, to which the now-president belonged a decade ago, paid a quarter of a million dollars to the gangs during the 2014 campaign in exchange for vote coercion in gang-controlled communities, on behalf of Bukele for San Salvador mayor and Salvador Sánchez Cerén as president.
“This support, the sources say, was key to Bukele’s ascent to power,” El Faro noted. “You’re going to tell your mom and your wife’s family that they have to vote for Nayib. If you don’t do it, we’ll kill them,” Liro Man says the gang members told their communities in that election. Of Bukele, he added, ‘he knew he had to get to the gangs in order to get to where he is.’"
Part of the deal was a tacit “no body, no crime” policy under which gang leaders agreed to hide their victims’ corpses as Bukele boasted of a historic reduction in homicides in a country once known as the world’s murder capital.
Not Trump ally, Trump’s bitch boy
It’s interesting to note how vital lying is to authoritarianism.
People often worry over the dark appeal of fascism. But if it’s really so enticing, why does every dictator have to, say, lie about being anti-gang while empowering them, or pretend to be pro-america while destroying the country on behalf of it’s enemies?
Yeah, there’s never been any reality to the appeal of fascism. Maybe for the raging narcissists, psychopaths, and conmen, but for the average moron the only appeal is the feefees they have for the lies and propaganda; the promise of a time and greatness that never existed.
Subconsciously, many people long for the protection of a benevolent father figure who will save, nurture and esteem them (especially in today’s ultraneoliberal jungle)…
But the benevolence depends on who you are and fluctuates with time. So you might end up under a maleficent father figure if you end up at odds with it. These people who can’t imagine they would ever be the targets of the father figure are the ones who think they are the chosen/good ones who can do no wrong.
Well, it’s not just a matter of intelligence of the general person. Understanding politics and bigger systems is a special skill. A person even of generally high intelligence may not have those gifts. Being able to pay attention to politics and larger trends is somewhat of a luxury, too. Many are ground down by survival needs.
So the lies work. I personally don’t think it’s more complicated than that.
Turns out every fascist is a lying hypocritical shitbag
I am shocked! I say shocked!
How fucked is my head that every time I see this guy’s name I read it bukkake?
I thought that was his name first time hearing about it. And now it’s the first thing that pops into my head. I’m glad I’m not alone.
You’re just a man who enjoys the finer things in life
Same here
There’s some confusing wording in this article.
Why are they calling the “gang leaders” revolutionaries? Different things, especially in El Salvador. And Calle 18 has never really been tied to the revolutionaries. What makes it more confusing is they supposedly supported the FMLN.
For those who didn’t grow up in El Salvador or reading the news there, that party was started by former (surviving) revolutionaries of the Salvadorian civil war, and didn’t explode in popularity but rather climbed to popularity over the years. The reason many members left that party is because eventually they did win power (they were pretty popular with the older generation after all, since the many were pro-revolutionaries during the civil war - which btw, the USA meddled in of course to quell), but once they won power they didn’t improve infrastructure and education, and the head leadership proved to be pretty corrupt.
Bukele among others then gained power by using the anger people felt at the betrayal of FMLN.
My point is you should probably read this straight from El Faro, because I think some things are being slightly misreported or lost on translation through the telephone game.
If you’re also looking for a different native news source for other reportings btw, there’s La Prensa Gráfica, but I think they only do Spanish.
To me it seems that “18th Street Revolucionarios” is just the name that this one gang has given to itself. Note that when the article calls the two individuals “Revolucionarios”, the word is capitalized, which confirms that it’s a proper name rather than a description.
But “18th Street” (translated) is and has already been a gang for a long time. Revolucionarios is just “revolutionaries” in Spanish.
Is this then an off shoot? Sub group?
I was wondering what it meant because FMLN is a party that came from revolutionaries, and they seem connected to the FMLN.
Searching for “Calle 18 revolucionarios” yields: https://cispes.org/article/special-report-el-salvador-enacts-emergency-security-measures-against-gang-violence?language=es
So apparently there are in fact two groups: “Calle 18-Sureños” and “Calle 18-Revolucionarios”
Interesting, guess they’ve split since I was younger. Wonder if the split has something to do with the politicians too, considering the political connections now.
El Faro hosts the interview with English subtitles.
Here are all the interviews.
Long and short, if we are to believe these witnesses, FMLN created Nayib Bukele, and Nayib Bukele took power. Typical fascist takeover.