Zürcher Nachrichten - Crime capital no more: El Salvador tourism boosted by Bukele

EUR -
AED 4.323873
AFN 74.173951
ALL 96.161179
AMD 444.090193
ANG 2.107165
AOA 1079.643171
ARS 1624.447372
AUD 1.668302
AWG 2.120727
AZN 2.003909
BAM 1.955757
BBD 2.372648
BDT 143.956821
BGN 1.939879
BHD 0.443968
BIF 3494.052516
BMD 1.177364
BND 1.49248
BOB 8.13982
BRL 6.068018
BSD 1.178074
BTN 107.048636
BWP 15.545657
BYN 3.376925
BYR 23076.334395
BZD 2.369248
CAD 1.613689
CDF 2507.785445
CHF 0.91116
CLF 0.025678
CLP 1013.898423
CNY 8.105097
CNH 8.099434
COP 4370.210336
CRC 558.592409
CUC 1.177364
CUP 31.200146
CVE 110.262565
CZK 24.232212
DJF 209.775367
DKK 7.471399
DOP 71.839024
DZD 152.92548
EGP 56.283771
ERN 17.66046
ETB 182.583568
FJD 2.591149
FKP 0.871665
GBP 0.872668
GEL 3.143937
GGP 0.871665
GHS 12.69372
GIP 0.871665
GMD 85.947722
GNF 10331.859591
GTQ 9.0378
GYD 246.464557
HKD 9.210201
HNL 31.166312
HRK 7.535837
HTG 154.597899
HUF 378.410683
IDR 19809.443637
ILS 3.652872
IMP 0.871665
INR 107.043756
IQD 1543.265919
IRR 1524867.693646
ISK 144.098016
JEP 0.871665
JMD 184.076717
JOD 0.834789
JPY 183.648734
KES 151.903286
KGS 102.960678
KHR 4725.935775
KMF 492.138305
KPW 1059.643727
KRW 1695.957041
KWD 0.361015
KYD 0.981678
KZT 587.857018
LAK 25226.157362
LBP 105493.170347
LKR 364.463378
LRD 216.165226
LSL 18.841124
LTL 3.47645
LVL 0.712176
LYD 7.457835
MAD 10.812161
MDL 20.155528
MGA 5029.888923
MKD 61.62919
MMK 2472.112713
MNT 4200.708847
MOP 9.49209
MRU 46.992361
MUR 54.688485
MVR 18.190405
MWK 2042.754889
MXN 20.242678
MYR 4.584415
MZN 75.819738
NAD 18.842084
NGN 1590.772177
NIO 43.349411
NOK 11.26307
NPR 171.278218
NZD 1.974733
OMR 0.452707
PAB 1.178074
PEN 3.955352
PGK 5.066931
PHP 67.885659
PKR 329.320127
PLN 4.212985
PYG 7601.832125
QAR 4.286759
RON 5.093868
RSD 117.443263
RUB 90.120317
RWF 1721.161991
SAR 4.416515
SBD 9.472108
SCR 17.781701
SDG 708.185508
SEK 10.654114
SGD 1.491831
SHP 0.883328
SLE 28.833735
SLL 24688.733628
SOS 672.088012
SRD 44.509657
STD 24369.057706
STN 24.499667
SVC 10.307772
SYP 130.155815
SZL 18.849584
THB 36.592982
TJS 11.161854
TMT 4.132548
TND 3.419524
TOP 2.83481
TRY 51.639305
TTD 7.995823
TWD 36.959926
TZS 3016.386511
UAH 50.953175
UGX 4220.906788
USD 1.177364
UYU 45.618993
UZS 14414.681674
VES 479.03356
VND 30841.049973
VUV 139.294023
WST 3.193282
XAF 655.942515
XAG 0.013525
XAU 0.000229
XCD 3.181885
XCG 2.123153
XDR 0.815782
XOF 655.942515
XPF 119.331742
YER 280.771814
ZAR 18.824514
ZMK 10597.688635
ZMW 22.17651
ZWL 379.110728
  • JRI

    0.0500

    13.17

    +0.38%

  • CMSC

    0.0000

    23.88

    0%

  • BCC

    6.1200

    86.66

    +7.06%

  • GSK

    -0.1400

    59.12

    -0.24%

  • BCE

    -0.0400

    26.03

    -0.15%

  • BP

    -0.1100

    38.3

    -0.29%

  • AZN

    1.6700

    206.61

    +0.81%

  • BTI

    -0.1900

    61.91

    -0.31%

  • NGG

    0.9400

    92.38

    +1.02%

  • RIO

    0.4400

    98.11

    +0.45%

  • RBGPF

    0.1000

    82.5

    +0.12%

  • RELX

    0.7200

    31.22

    +2.31%

  • CMSD

    -0.0500

    23.68

    -0.21%

  • VOD

    0.1400

    15.7

    +0.89%

  • RYCEF

    0.3000

    18

    +1.67%

Crime capital no more: El Salvador tourism boosted by Bukele
Crime capital no more: El Salvador tourism boosted by Bukele / Photo: Marvin RECINOS - AFP

Crime capital no more: El Salvador tourism boosted by Bukele

A few years ago, El Tunco beach in El Salvador was crawling with gang members who robbed and extorted people at will.

Text size:

Now it is thronged with tourists, lured by the transformation of El Salvador from one of the region's deadliest countries to one of its safest.

The turnaround began in 2022, when President Nayib Bukele declared war on gangs by imposing a state of emergency used to detain tens of thousands of suspected gang members.

The crackdown had a dramatic impact on crime, reducing the murder rate by around 98 percent over 2015 levels, to the general delight of Salvadorans.

But it has not been without controversy.

Thousands of innocent people were swept up in the crackdown, of whom around 8,000 have been released.

Suspected gang members are held incommunicado and have in some cases, been subjected to torture, according to NGOs and a group of Venezuelan migrants who were briefly detained in El Salvador last year after being deported by the United States.

The uncompromising approach of the world's self-described "coolest dictator" has apparently caused little outrage in a region throttled by organized crime.

- 'The innocent who suffer' -

Although his own country boasts some of the best beaches in the world, Costa Rican engineer Juan Gabriel Lopez chose the seaside town of El Tunco for a recent break with his wife.

The pair took in a gig by Colombian superstar Shakira, who performed five dates this month in El Salvador -- the "Whenever, Wherever" singer's first-ever concerts in the country.

Standing on a lively street in El Tunco, lined with bars, restaurants and souvenir shops selling T-shirts -- some printed with Bukele's face -- Lopez was philosophical about rights abuses in El Salvador.

"As in any process of change, there will always be the innocent who suffer for the guilty," he said.

He contrasted the situation of Costa Rica -- long seen as a beacon of stability in Central America, now fighting a surge in crime linked to the drug trade -- with that of El Salvador.

"We in Costa Rica would like to take this step," he said of Bukele's security crackdown.

Dutchman Camille Schyns, who was visiting El Tunco with his parents, said he was aware there are "quite a few human rights violations" in El Salvador.

"But at the same time (...) what Salvadorans tell me is that they like that security has increased a lot," he told AFP.

- 'Sit on a rock' -

Bukele, a savvy communicator, tirelessly promotes his country as the new bucket list destination on social media.

"If you want to see how safe El Salvador is, go to the ugliest, darkest place, sit on a rock, and wait for dawn," the president boasts.

The United States State Department last year upgraded the nation to a "Level 1" travel advisory -- the best-possible rating, on a par with Greece and Finland -- saying El Salvador's gang activity, violent crimes and murders have decreased in recent years.

The country of six million people, which is dotted with volcanoes and pre-Hispanic archaeological sites, received 4.1 million visitors last year, 60 percent more than in 2019 when Bukele came to power.

Tourism brought in $3.6 billion in revenue last year, nearly 10 percent of GDP.

- On the map -

Attracting stars like Shakira is part of government strategy.

The pop diva attracted more than 144,000 visitors, almost half of them foreigners.

"El Salvador is now on the map as an event venue," Tourism Minister Morena Valdez declared.

Many Shakira fans travelled from neighboring Guatemala and Honduras, which remain plagued by gang violence.

"We wish we had the peace and tranquility we have here back in Guatemala," 45-year-old Glendy Pineda told AFP.

Not everyone welcomed Shakira's sojourn, however.

A group of prisoners' relatives expressed disappointment that her "Women No Longer Cry" tour was being used by Bukele to "cover up injustice and his reprehensible acts."

"In El Salvador, women, mothers, and relatives of innocent victims who suffer imprisonment, torture, and death, forced evictions, persecution, and rigged trials also weep," they wrote in an open letter to the songstress.

P.Gashi--NZN