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Morales decided to go back. He now owns a luxury beachside resort in the very spot where he grew up.

Diego Morales fled the violence in El Salvador and spent 30 years in the United States. He returned to run a luxury hotel, saying the country is now safe thanks to President Nayib Bukele’s anti-gang crackdown. Source: SBS / Simon Phegan
It’s part of a redeveloped 21km stretch of coastline — known as Surf City — that’s aimed at attracting tourists.
Central America’s smallest nation — population about six million — welcomed a record 3.2 million foreign visitors last year, an increase of 40 per cent since 2019.
“You can leave the doors open and nothing’s going to happen. We feel great.”

The 43-year-old president Nayib Bukele has brought bitcoin, the Miss Universe pageant, and safety to El Salvador, but critics say peace and security have come at the expense of human rights. Source: AFP
The controversial crackdown
Bukele’s mission to stop the gangs started in March 2022, after 87 people were murdered in a single weekend.
Critics have accused the Bukele administration of setting arrest quotas, indiscriminately targeting people based on their tattoos, some allegedly artistic and not linked to the gangs. The El Salvadorian government has rejected those claims.

Human rights groups condemned the inhumane conditions in overcrowded prisons. The officials say it’s part of the punishment. Source: SBS / Simon Phegan
On 20 December 2024, marking 1,000 days of the state of exception that was meant to be a temporary measure, Amnesty International censured El Salvador’s “peace and security at the expense of human rights”.
Since the state of exception began, over 350 people have died in prisons, according to Salvadoran human rights groups.
Strengthening relations with Trump
But Bukele’s “war on gangs” has caught the attention of one world leader: US President Donald Trump.

El Salvador’s president Nayib Bukele became the first Latin American leader to receive an invitation to the White House from the Trump administration, marking a sign of strengthening relations between the two countries over US deportation plans. Source: Getty / Win McNamee
El Salvador has already taken in more than without due process on suspicion of being members of the Tren de Aragua gang — despite the fact that a US federal judge declared the deportations illegal.
“And I just asked the president, this massive complex that he built, jail complex. I said: ‘Can you build some more of them, please?”
The CECOT prison
Opened in 2023, it can house 40,000 inmates, although the government doesn’t disclose the exact number of people currently held there.

CECOT, a massive jail complex, opened in 2023 and can house up to 40,000 inmates. Source: SBS / Simon Phegan
Conditions are harsh: the lights never go out, inmates sleep on metal frames without mattresses in overcrowded cells, which they are allowed to leave for only 30 minutes a day, says CECOT director Belarmino Garcia.
No visits of any kind are allowed, not even from family or lawyers. The only outside contact the inmates have is through choreographed tours for the media.
“While CECOT may have more modern infrastructure, its mistreatment of detainees is similar to other Salvadoran prisons,” the Human Rights Watch statement from 20 March 2025 reads.

CECOT director Belarmino Garcia gives journalists a tour of the prison. He’s the only CECOT employee who shows his face to the inmates and the public. Source: SBS / Simon Phegan
Garcia doesn’t apologise for the harsh conditions for the inmates, many of whom have not yet been convicted.
“Now, there is a successful recovery in our country, families can go out at any time of the night without fear because those individuals are here.”
Swept up in the crackdown
But while the state of exception took the gang members off the streets, it also swept up thousands of civilians who say they’re innocent, including Mejia’s 22-year-old daughter, Carla.

Alfredo Mejía was relieved when the gangs were locked up, but the crackdown also swept up his 22-year-old daughter Carla who he says is innocent. Source: SBS / Simon Phegan
She was arrested for not having her identity document in 2022, and he hasn’t had any contact with her since.
“After two months, [it] is not a regime of exception anymore, it is a regime of repression.”
“Of these 83,000, we estimate that at least 25,000 Salvadorans have absolutely no link with gangs but are being processed as if they do,” she says.

Human rights lawyer Ingrid Escobar’s organisation is legally representing 6,000 people who claim they’ve been wrongfully imprisoned, including human rights activists. Source: SBS / Simon Phegan
Escobar’s organisation is legally representing 6,000 people, including human rights activists, who say they’ve been wrongfully imprisoned.