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El Salvador's Bukele defends crackdown on gang 'cancer' after vote
El Salvador's President Nayib Bukele, all but assured re-election in elections held Sunday, batted away criticism of his rights record and boasted he had cured the Central American country of a "cancer" of gangs.
Bukele, 42, holds approval ratings hovering around 90 percent and polls as Latin America's most popular leader on the back of a war on gangs that has slashed homicide rates in the violence-weary country.
El Salvador's fearsome gangs took some 120,000 civilian lives in three decades, according to the government, which says criminal groups controlled 80 percent of the country when Bukele took power in 2019.
The country, once one of the most dangerous in the world, saw the murder rate plummet last year to its lowest level in three decades -- far below the global average.
Voting without fear for the first time in many years, Salvadorans young and old waited patiently -- many gleefully -- in queues watched over by tens of thousands of police and soldiers countrywide.
Bukele, who wore his trademark baseball cap as he voted with his wife just two hours before polls closed, then held an extensive press conference defending the tally of over 75,000 suspected gangsters rounded up since a state of emergency entered into force in March 2022.
"Why do we have the biggest incarceration rate in the world? Because we... changed the murder capital of the world, the world's most dangerous country, into the safest country in the Western Hemisphere," he said.
"The only way to do that is to arrest all the murderers."
Activists say many innocents -- including minors -- have been caught up in the dragnet, locked up in inhumane conditions and even subjected to torture.
Thousands are held in a brand-new prison -- plugged as the largest in the Americas -- which the president had built in a matter of months.
"We did surgery, we are in radiotherapy, and we will leave healthy without the cancer of gangs," insisted Bukele, accusing Westerners of seeking to impose their "liberal ideas of what a democracy should be" on El Salvador.
- 'Dictator' -
Bukele's very candidacy is controversial, having been made possible by a loyalist Supreme Court ruling allowing him to bypass a constitutional ban on successive terms.
On Sunday, asked whether he would change the law to seek a third term, the president replied: "I don't think constitutional reform is necessary."
He did not make it clear what his future plans were.
Bukele, who has ironically adopted the monicker "dictator" sometimes used to describe him, is expected to expand his hold over the 60-member legislative assembly in Sunday's presidential and parliamentary elections.
With little need to campaign for himself, social-media savvy Bukele has instead focused on beating the drum for his party, Nuevas Ideas.
Bukele urged Salvadorans again Sunday to vote en masse "so that we have a legislative assembly that can continue approving the state of emergency."
In December, an Amnesty International report raised alarm over the "gradual replacement of gang violence with state violence," pointing to arbitrary arrests.
But for most Salvadorans, this seems to be a not-too-pressing issue.
"Things were ugly before," said Sandra Burgos, 68, who recently opened a small bookstore in La Campanera -- a once notoriously violent neighborhood of San Salvador which in the time of gang rule was divided into numerous no-go areas.
"Now we are fine. We can move around... before it was not possible."
- 'State violence' -
Centralization of power is another concern, with the Bukele-aligned legislature having replaced top judges and the attorney general -- both institutions he had clashed with.
There are also worries about worsening antagonism towards critics and independent media, and of opaque public accounting.
El Salvador's ailing economy will be a major challenge for Bukele's second term, with high public debt and the president's investment of taxpayer money in bitcoin widely seen as a failed gambit.
Nearly 30 percent of Salvadorans lived in poverty in 2022, according to the UN's Economic Commission for Latin America and the Caribbean.
Voting in El Salvador is not compulsory, and turnout was just over 50 percent in 2019, when Bukele won in the first round with 53 percent of the vote.
There are about 6.2 million eligible voters worldwide, some 740,000 abroad -- mainly in the United States, according to electoral authorities.
None of Bukele's five rival candidates have even five percent of polled support.
O.Brown--AT