El Salvador presidential elections
Source: CAFOD
Presidential elections will be held on Sunday 4 February 2024 in El Salvador. CAFOD's partner Tutela Legal and a CAFOD spokesperson comment on the human rights situation in the country ahead of the vote.
Alejandro Diaz from Salvadoran legal organisation Tutela Legal María Julia Hernández, a CAFOD partner, said: "People in El Salvador are living in an indefinite state of emergency, with human rights being massively and systematically violated every day. This is being presented to the public as something totally normal and publicised as a model for national security to be exported across Latin America. Today innocent people are arrested, tortured and killed. There is no fair trial and no impartial judges.
"An important part of our heritage is our historical memory. Yet the government want to deny history by saying 'El Salvador is a new country, there is a re-birth of El Salvador' They are also trying to legitimise the human rights violations and the rupture of the balance of powers in the country. These elections don't respect the constitution and the international community must start speaking out about this and take more prominence.
"At stake is not just the elections, but also historic memory, democracy and the legacy and the blood of many people and figures like our Saint Oscar Romero, who stood alongside his people as they struggled against injustice."
A spokesperson for CAFOD, said: "There is no denying President Bukele's popularity, but the international community should not overlook the impact of his party's policies on human rights over the last five years, and in particular since the State of Exception was introduced in March 2022.
"The first task of the new President should be to begin fair and transparent judicial processes for the thousands of people currently being held without trial in already overcrowded jails. Around 75,000 people have been arrested over the last two years alone: an enormous number given the country has a population of just over six million.
"Not a single person has been brought to justice since the civil war ended in 1992. Commitments made to past and current victims cannot be upheld with an ongoing State of Exception."
"El Salvador's first Saint, Oscar Romero, was a partner of CAFOD, and his bravery to speak out against injustice in the country continues to inspire us today. Alongside our local partners, we will continue to echo concerns about the dismantling of human rights institutions, curbs to free speech, and lack of justice."
CAFOD and Saint Oscar Romero: CAFOD has a long history of working with Saint Oscar Romero and promoting his legacy. In the 1970s, CAFOD supported Archbishop Romero's famous radio broadcasts, which - at a time when the press was heavily censored - were often the only means by which people in El Salvador knew the truth about the atrocities occurring in their country. When Romero's radio station was blown up, CAFOD provided funding to rebuild it. After Romero was martyred, the aid agency's staff successfully petitioned Lambeth Council to rename the Brixton street where their office was located 'Romero Close'. And when CAFOD moved to a new office in 2009, it was named 'Romero House'.
CAFOD's work in El Salvador: CAFOD supports local organisation in El Salvador who are helping farmers to improve their crops, assisting communities in reducing the risk of disasters, building peace, defending human rights and trying to create a more just society.