ReportWire

Tag: El Salvador

  • Kilmar Abrego Garcia released from detention, returning to Maryland

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    Kilmar Abrego Garcia was released from Putnam County Jail in Tennessee on Friday and has been reunited with his family while he awaits trial, according to his attorney.

    It’s the latest development in the case of a man who was mistakenly removed from the U.S. to an El Salvador prison where he alleges he was tortured. Initially detained by immigration officials in March before being sent to El Salvador, Abrego Garcia returned to the U.S. in June to face criminal charges that were filed in Tennessee. The Justice Department has accused him of smuggling and gang membership, allegations his family denies. He pleaded not guilty to two criminal counts of human smuggling last month.

    “For the first time since March, our client Kilmar Abrego Garcia is reunited with his loving family,” attorney Simon Sandoval-Moshenberg said. “While his release brings some relief, we all know that he is far from safe. ICE detention or deportation to an unknown third country still threatens to tear his family apart. A measure of justice has been done, but the government must stop pursuing actions that would once again separate this family.”

    Kilmar Abrego Garcia, center, leaves the Putnam County Jail, Friday, Aug. 22, 2025, in Cookeville, Tenn. / Credit: Brett Carlsen / AP

    A federal magistrate had ordered Abrego Garcia to be released from jail while he awaits trial, currently scheduled for January. He is expected to have to wear an electronic monitoring device.

    Abrego Garcia’s lawyers requested a delay of his release from jail in Tennessee earlier this summer, fearing that Immigration and Customs Enforcement could immediately detain him and try to deport him again. Last month, a federal judge in Maryland ruled that the government must return Abrego Garcia to supervised release under the U.S. Immigration and Customs Enforcement office in Baltimore, re-implementing a 2019 order.

    Under that supervision order, issued in 2019, Abrego Garcia, who is Salvadoran, had permission to live in Maryland, as well as authorization to work. He was required to check in with an immigration officer at the ICE office in Baltimore. Court filings indicate Abrego Garcia was in compliance with the ICE supervision order when he was deported to El Salvador. The judge also ruled that Abrego Garcia must receive 72 hours’ notice if the Trump administration plans to deport him anywhere other than his country of origin, El Salvador.

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  • ‘I thought I was going to die there’: Voices of migrants deported to a Salvadoran prison

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    In March, President Trump invoked the 1798 Alien Enemies Act to declare Venezuela’s Tren de Aragua gang a foreign terrorist group.

    Shortly after, the U.S. sent more than 250 Venezuelans who it said were a part of the gang to El Salvador, where they were jailed for months in one of the country’s most notorious prisons, the Terrorism Confinement Center, also known as CECOT.

    Many of the men insist that they have no ties to the gang and were denied due process.

    After enduring months in detention, the men were sent home in July as part of a prisoner exchange deal that included Venezuela’s release of several detained Americans.

    Venezuela’s attorney general said interviews with the men revealed “systemic torture” in the Salvadoran prison, including daily beatings, rancid food and sexual abuse. The men have been adjusting to life back in Venezuela, which most fled because of their home country’s political and economic instability.

    The Times photographed four of the Venezuelans — Arturo Suárez, Angelo Escalona, Frizgeralth Cornejo and Ángelo Bolívar — as they got reacquainted with their families and life outside prison.

    A man with a dark beard, wearing glasses, headphones and a dark ballcap, sings

    Arturo Suárez records a song at a studio in Caracas’ Catia neighborhood. He composed the song in prison in El Salvador.

    Arturo Suárez, 34

    Suárez, a musician, was detained in North Carolina while gathered with friends to record a music video. Ten people were arrested that day. Inside the Salvadoran prison, he said, music was forbidden and guards beat him repeatedly for singing. But he refused to stay silent. From his cell, he wrote a song that spread from cell to cell, becoming an anthem of hope for the Venezuelans imprisoned with him.

    “From Cell 31, God spoke to me,” the lyrics go in part. “He said, son, be patient, your blessing is coming soon…. Let nothing kill your faith, let nothing make you doubt because it won’t be long before you return home.”

    1

    A brown-colored handmade heart displayed on an open palm

    2

    A dark-bearded main with a tattoo of a bird on his neck

    1. Suárez holds a heart he fashioned in prison out of tortillas and toothpaste, with letters made from threads of the white shorts he wore. 2. This tattoo of a bird enabled his family to identify Suárez in videos released by the Salvadoran government.

    A man with dark hair, seated under a hand-drawn sign and a cluster of red and purple balloons, looks at his phone

    Suárez checks his phone beneath a poster welcoming him home in Caracas.

    I thought I wasn’t going to make it out of there. I thought I was going to die there.

    Posters depicting individual people line a fence near a street vendor selling watermelons

    Posters depicting Suárez and other Venezuelan migrants deported to El Salvador are seen in Caracas’ El Valle neighborhood.

    Angelo Escalona, 18

    Escalona had turned 18 just three months before Immigration and Customs Enforcement agents detained him in the same raid that swept up his friend Suárez, the musician. His dream was to become a DJ, and Escalona had saved up to buy equipment that he showed Suárez just before they were arrested. He had no tattoos, no criminal record and was just at the wrong place at the wrong time, he said.

    When the deportation flight landed in El Salvador, he and the other Venezuelans tried to resist being taken off the plane. “We all fastened our seat belts because we’re Venezuelans — we weren’t supposed to be there” in El Salvador, he said. “But the Salvadoran police boarded the plane and started beating the people in the front.”

    1

    A young man with dark hair, in a dark T-shirt, stands for a portrait with arms crossed

    2

    A hand-drawn poster on a rack with items on different shelves

    3

    A woman with glasses, holding a large white hand-drawn poster with words and a photo of a young man

    1. Angelo Escalona said that the other Venezuelan prisoners called him “El Menor,” or the minor, because at 18 he was the youngest of the deportees.
    2. A poster family members held during protests demanding his release says, “Your family has not abandoned you.”
    3. Escalona’s aunt displays a poster with a letter his mother wrote to him upon his release. “Son, I love you,” it says in red.

    When we arrived [at the prison], they told us, ‘Welcome to the real hell — no one leaves here unless they’re dead.’

    A view of homes covering a hillside, with dark clouds overhead

    A view of Caracas’ Antímano neighborhood, where Frizgeralth Cornejo lived with his family before traveling north to the United States.

    Frizgeralth Cornejo, 26

    In mid-2024, Frizgeralth Cornejo made the long trek through the Darién Gap, the dangerous jungle separating Central and South America and made his way north with three friends. Hoping to obtain asylum in the United States, he had applied for an appointment with immigration officials through Customs and Border Protection’s CBP One app.

    But when Cornejo, 26, presented himself at the border, officials accused him of gang affiliation because of his tattoos. Everyone else in his group was allowed through, but not him.

    1

    Two men and a woman seated at a table inside a home

    2

    Two men walk near other people. Behind them are buildings

    1. Cornejo has lunch with his mother, Austria, and his brother, Carlos, in Caracas’ Antímano neighborhood. 2. Cornejo walks with his brother, Carlos, in the neighborhood of Sabana Grande in Caracas.

    A man in a dark ballcap, with tattoos, kisses the top of a brown-haired woman's head

    Cornejo kisses his mother, Austria.

    1

    A bearded man in a cap, with a rose tattoo on his neck

    2

    A man lifts his shirt to show a tattoo of an angel carrying an assault weapon and a rose

    1. Cornejo shows the neck tattoo that allowed his family to identify him in videos released by the Salvadoran government. 2. U.S. authorities claimed this tattoo linked him to the Tren de Aragua gang.

    I never imagined being imprisoned just for getting tattoos.

    A view of people near vehicles, one riding a bicycle, on a street near buildings

    A view of the neighborhood where the family of Ángelo Bolívar lives in Valencia.

    Ángelo Bolívar, 26

    Bolívar was living in Texas when he was arrested by ICE agents and sent to El Salvador’s CECOT prison. His many tattoos are part of a family legacy, one he shares with his mother, Silvia Cruz. His late father was a tattoo artist. His tattoos led to his imprisonment, he said, because authorities saw them as proof of membership in the Tren de Aragua gang. He is now back in the city of Valencia, about 80 miles east of Caracas.

    They said I was a gang member because of my tattoos — because I had a watch and a rosary. Even though the ICE agents had tattoos of roses and watches too.

    A blond woman covered in tattoos holds the face of a young man, with her other hand over his

    Bolívar and his mother, Silvia Cruz, in Valencia.

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    Kate Linthicum, Gabriela Oráa

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  • World record pupusa cooked up at Fiesta DC – WTOP News

    World record pupusa cooked up at Fiesta DC – WTOP News

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    Visitors at Fiesta DC in downtown D.C. just witnessed what is a delicious Guinness World Record pupusa in the making.

    Dozens of D.C. area chefs worked together to finish the record-breaking pupusa. (WTOP/Jose Umana)

    Visitors at Fiesta DC in downtown D.C. just witnessed what is a delicious Guinness World Record pupusa in the making.

    Dozens of D.C. area chefs worked together to finish the record-breaking pupusa — clocking in at 20 feet in diameter — and shortly after being certified as the record-breaker, the stuffed flat breads were already being served up to members of the community.

    Led by Iris Jimenez, owner of La Casita Pupuseria, a team of 80 chefs successfully broke the previous record Saturday afternoon. Jimenez said the team started the challenge early Saturday on a comal, or smooth, flat griddle, that was specially built for the effort.

    “It was made in four parts and they built it here at Fiesta DC at around 4 a.m.,” Jimenez said.

    She joined festival organizers who said they hoped the new world record would help “showcase the rich heritage and flavors of El Salvador to the world” and “celebrate our vibrant culture through (a) beloved dish!”

    “It really is significant for us because of the community, especially during Hispanic Heritage Month, we really celebrate everything: our food, our music and our history,” Jimenez told WTOP.

    The pupusa, organizers said, involved “traditional ingredients—corn masa, cheese, beans and chicharrón—on an unprecedented scale, demonstrating the skill, dedication and passion of everyone involved.” Ingredient that Jimenez said were only part of making a delectable pupusa.

    “What makes an excellent pupusa is the ratio between the filling and the masa,” Jimenez said.

    Eduardo Perdomo with the Mayor’s Office on Latino Affairs told WTOP that the team of chefs have successfully made the Guiness Book of World Records following authentication by an official with the group. After being measured, the finished 20-foot pupusa was doled out to Fiesta DC ticket holders and cooks, celebrating a record-breaking job well done.

    Fiesta DC highlights Latino culture in and around the District every year in downtown D.C. The events started just in front of the U.S. Courthouse on Constitution and Pennsylvania Avenues on Saturday morning, closing streets through downtown, for the “Mega Pupusa” cooking event. Events will conclude Sunday evening with a parade and festival.

    This is a developing story. WTOP’s Ivy Lyons contributed to the report.

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    Dick Uliano

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  • ‘Problemista’ is a magical realist parable about the insanity of America’s immigration system

    ‘Problemista’ is a magical realist parable about the insanity of America’s immigration system

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    Immigration restrictionists sometimes like to say they favor immigration, so long as it’s legal. Why can’t immigrants get in line and follow the rules? The problem is that the legal system is labyrinthine, and the rules often border on the absurd. It’s Kafka-esque—or at least Kafka as filtered through the lens of Monty Python and Charlie Kaufman. It’s existentially terrifying, but also sort of bizarre and at times even quite funny. 

    That’s a reasonable approximation of the view taken by Problemista, a magical realist immigration fable about an aspiring toy designer from El Salvador who just wants to find a work visa. That sort of story could easily become saccharine or somber, but filmmaker and star Julian Torres generally keeps the tone light and charming. This too-eager-to-please movie sometimes suffers from a surfeit of whimsy; at times it feels like gagging on rainbows. But the best sequences are quirky journeys into the surreal designed to capture the frustrations of American immigration policy and the seemingly impossible demands it places on those who just want to work. 

    Problemista follows the travails of Alejandro, a young man living in New York City who dreams of creating unusual toys for a company like Hasbro. He has a notebook full of ideas, most of which are twists on some familiar toy in which the toy is in some ways broken or altered to make a social point: There are Cabbage Patch Kids with fake cellphones that display their complicated relationships, toy trucks with flat tires, multicolored Slinkys that refuse to climb down the stairs. It’s not entirely clear why any real-life kid would actually want to play with these intentionally mangled things; they’re not really toys so much as gimmicky art projects.

    So it makes sense when Alejandro, after being fired from a shifty cryogenic life preservation company, ends up working in the art world for a woman named Elizabeth. Elizabeth’s husband Bobby (rapper and musician RZA) is a client at the cryogenics company, and in conscious life he was a painter; she wants to put on a show of her husband’s paintings, all of which are of eggs. The yolk’s on Alejandro. 

    Elizabeth, you see, is not a good egg. Indeed, something in her has cracked. 

    As played by Tilda Swinton, Elizabeth is self-absorbed, demanding, and difficult in the extreme, the sort of person who cannot be pleased and always feels wronged by the world. But she offers him a path to something he desperately needs: a work visa that will allow him to stay in the country legally after being fired. So he puts up with her rages and tries to help her stage the show. It isn’t, er, eggsactly easy. 

    In the meantime, he has to come up with money to help fund the cost of obtaining a visa—but officially, because of his immigration status, he’s not allowed to earn money. So he resorts to cash jobs found on Craig’s list, which is represented by a sort of cackling, glitching demon character doling out gig work that may or may not pay at all. 

    If all this sounds a little bit forced, a little bit over-the-top, a little bit too pleased with itself, well, yes. At times the movie comes across a little like one of Alejandro’s unfortunately designed toys—conceptually clever but intentionally broken, a neat idea that you can’t really play with. 

    But the movie is bursting with interesting, weird ideas, and it’s often genuinely charming as well, with its dream-like portrayals of immigration purgatory and the struggle to keep Elizabeth happy recalling Monty Python alum’s celebrated fantasy sequences in Brazil. Torres, who himself was born in El Salvador, has worked as a comedian and writer in the past, but he displays real promise as a first-time filmmaker. Americans and moviegoers are better off that he’s doing his work here. 

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    Peter Suderman

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  • Bitfinex Securities launches El Salvador’s first licensed digital asset service provider

    Bitfinex Securities launches El Salvador’s first licensed digital asset service provider

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    Bitfinex Securities debuts as El Salvador’s first licensed digital asset service provider, aligning with the country’s pioneering Bitcoin-focused financial initiatives.

    The securities token platform, gearing up for a dynamic phase, is now open to customer applications. This development is accompanied by the anticipation of numerous tokenized financial asset issuances, expected to hit the market in the first half of this year.

    Bitfinex Securities CTO Paolo Ardoino expressed enthusiasm about the launch in El Salvador, highlighting the country’s unique position due to its adoption of Bitcoin as legal tender and efforts to nurture a Bitcoin-centric economy.

    Ardoino believes the move will benefit Bitfinex and enable El Salvador to attract global investment through competitively priced securities offerings.

    The company’s optimism is partly fueled by the success of U.S. spot Bitcoin ETF, with Bitfinex anticipating strong demand for similar regulated digital asset investment vehicles. Jesse Knutson, Head of Operations at Bitfinex Securities, pointed out the recent surge of institutional investor interest in Bitcoin-focused financial products as a positive sign for their venture.

    El Salvador has been in the cryptocurrency spotlight since 2021, following its decision to grant Bitcoin legal tender status. The country also introduced the “Adopting El Salvador Freedom Visa” program in December with collaboration from stablecoin issuer Tether.

    The program allows investors to apply for the Freedom Visa by investing $1 million in Bitcoin or USDT. El Salvador recently established a digital asset regulatory framework, laying the groundwork for fully operational Bitcoin-based financial markets, further solidifying its position in the digital currency landscape.


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    Bralon Hill

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  • Bitfinex Unveils Securities Platform in El Salvador

    Bitfinex Unveils Securities Platform in El Salvador

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    Bitfinex, one of the oldest cryptocurrency exchanges, has announced the launch of a securities trading platform in El Salvador, the first country to recognize bitcoin (BTC) as legal tender.

    According to a press release seen by CryptoPotato, Bitfinex Securities El Salvador will be the Central American country’s first registered and licensed digital assets service provider.

    Bitfinex Securities Platform Launches in El Salvador

    Bitfinex Securities El Salvador is currently accepting customer applications and has a pipeline of issuances awaiting launch.

    The new platform launch follows the greenlighting of several Bitcoin exchange-traded funds (ETFs) by the United States Securities and Exchange Commission (SEC) two weeks ago. The move rides on the expectation that there will be substantial demand for similar financial instruments that give investors exposure to digital assets.

    Around this time last year, El Salvador approved a digital asset regulatory framework, paving the way for fully operational and regulated Bitcoin markets. Bitfinex believes developing a tokenized securities industry in the country represents a leap for financial innovation in Latin America.

    Expressing excitement for the latest feat, Paolo Ardoino, Chief Technology Officer of Bitfinex, said: “We are delighted to be able to announce the launch of Bitfinex Securities in El Salvador. This is not only an important market for Bitfinex given its adoption of Bitcoin as legal tender and the fostering of a Bitcoin -based economy, but it also gives El Salvador the opportunity to attract global investment flows, as issuers put out competitively priced securities offerings.”

    First Set of Products to Go Live in H1

    Bitfinex further classified El Salvador’s historic adoption of BTC as legal tender in 2021 as a visionary step towards a Bitcoin-centric economy. The decision would ease the launch of tokenized assets set to come into the market in the first half of the year.

    “The new Digital Assets Securities Law, passed last year, carved out digital assets regulation from the traditional financial regulator and created the national commission of digital assets, that oversees the supervision and regulation of the ecosystem,” stated Juan Carlos Reyes, President of the National Commission of Digital Assets in El Salvador.

    Meanwhile, users who seek access to all Bitfinex Securities issuances must be verified with the platform’s Kazakhstan arm and the new firm in El Salvador.

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    Mandy Williams

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  • El Salvador's Bitcoin Adoption Drops Significantly: Survey Reveals a 12% Usage Rate in 2023

    El Salvador's Bitcoin Adoption Drops Significantly: Survey Reveals a 12% Usage Rate in 2023

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    El Salvador made history by becoming the first nation to embrace Bitcoin as a legal tender more than two years ago.

    Although the country’s financial outlook has seen positive developments, a recent study carried out by José Simeón Cañas Central American University unveiled a mixed sentiment regarding the correlation between the adoption of Bitcoin and perceived improvements in personal well-being.

    Mixed Feelings

    According to the survey, 12% of the local population in El Salvador used Bitcoin at least once to pay for goods and services in 2023. This marks a significant decrease from 2022, when the same university reported that 24.4% of Salvadorans had engaged in transactions using Bitcoin.

    The decline in numbers raised questions about the sustainability and widespread acceptance of the premier crypto asset in everyday transactions.

    Among those who utilized Bitcoin for transactions, nearly half – 49.7% – made purchases using the crypto asset only one to three times. On the other end of the spectrum, 20% of respondents used Bitcoin for 10 transactions or more, indicating a notable difference in the frequency of crypto usage.

    Meanwhile, Groceries topped the list, with 22.9% of respondents using Bitcoin for grocery shopping, followed closely by supermarkets at 20.9%. A surprising 15% of respondents reported using Bitcoin for transactions at veterinary clinics, highlighting the diverse range of businesses incorporating the asset into their payment systems.

    The number of respondents who felt that their family’s life had improved during the past year, coinciding with Bitcoin becoming legal tender, increased from 3% in 2022 to 6.8% in 2023. While this suggests a positive association, it is important to note that the majority of respondents – 93.2% – did not attribute any improvements in their lives to Bitcoin usage.

    Contrary to the positive correlation between Bitcoin adoption and personal well-being, the survey reveals a disconnect between crypto use and perceptions of the overall economic situation in El Salvador. Only 0.5% of respondents believe Bitcoin has played a role in the country’s economic improvement. Instead, more than a third of respondents – 34.3% – attribute the perceived economic improvement to a decline in crime rates – 24.3%.

    El Salvador’s Advancements Thus Far

    On June 9th, 2021, El Salvador’s government officially endorsed legislation in the official gazette, designating the digital currency Bitcoin as legal tender within the nation. The legislation became effective on September 7th, 2021, making El Salvador the world’s first country to embrace Bitcoin as legal tender formally.

    This decision faced considerable criticism from mainstream media and traditional financial institutions, a sentiment that amplified during the subsequent bear market.

    However, El Salvador has made significant strides since then. The country’s investment in Bitcoin proved lucrative as its portfolio turned profitable amidst the bear market, reaching $42,000 in December 2023.

    Taking a step further, the government collaborated with stablecoin issuer Tether to introduce the “Adopting El Salvador Freedom Visa Program.” Applicants are required to submit a non-refundable deposit of $999 in either Bitcoin or USDT, and successful applicants undergo a Know Your Customer (KYC) verification process.

    In another development, the Digital Assets Commission granted approval for El Salvador’s Bitcoin-backed bonds, known as Volcano Bonds. According to the National Bitcoin Office (ONBTC), these bonds will be accessible on Bitfinex Securities, a regulated segment of the cryptocurrency exchange Bitfinex.

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    Chayanika Deka

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  • Authorities bust cocaine delivery service operation in Los Angeles, Ventura counties

    Authorities bust cocaine delivery service operation in Los Angeles, Ventura counties

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    Ventura County sheriff’s narcotics investigators busted a “large-scale transnational drug trafficking organization” this week that was operating a cocaine delivery service in Ventura and Los Angeles counties, authorities said.

    Detectives made eight arrests and seized more than 5 pounds of cocaine, five firearms and “a significant amount of suspected drug proceeds,” sheriff’s officials announced in a news release Friday. The bust followed a five-month investigation into the drug trafficking operation.

    The delivery service used drivers to supply cocaine to hundreds of people in Ventura and Los Angeles counties on a daily basis, authorities said.

    The investigation launched earlier this summer revealed that 40-year-old Joel Cruz Ayala and 28-year-old Elmer Ayala-Ayala, both of Bakersfield, “were working for the organization as full-time dispatchers,” according to the news release.

    The pair, detectives said, were tasked with taking incoming orders and dispatching drivers to customers.

    Luis Cruz, 33, was identified as the dispatch house manager, “who was in direct communication with high-ranking members of the organization in El Salvador,” according to the sheriff’s news release.

    The organization also employed multiple delivery drivers, including Wilfredo Castillo, 24, Lisandro Moreno, 22, Kevin Bonilla, 20, Jose Ayala Hernandez, 40, and Noel Cruz, 31.

    All five were arrested at their residences in Panorama City and North Hills “in possession of a large amount of pre-packaged cocaine ready to be delivered, as well as large sums of suspected drug proceeds.”

    Cruz Ayala, Ayala-Ayala and Cruz were located and arrested at their residences and the dispatch house in Bakersfield.

    “A significant amount of evidence was located, exposing their large-scale transnational drug trafficking organization, including money transfers to higher ranking members of the organization in El Salvador,” the release states.

    Detectives from the Ventura County Sheriff’s Narcotics Unit believe the arrests will greatly disrupt the larger organization. “However, detectives continue to investigate numerous other leads which will aid them in their pursuit of dismantling it completely,” according to the release.

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    Brennon Dixson

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  • BlackRock revises BTC ETF filing, El Salvador’s crypto citizenship trending, and more: Hodler’s Digest, Dec. 10-16

    BlackRock revises BTC ETF filing, El Salvador’s crypto citizenship trending, and more: Hodler’s Digest, Dec. 10-16

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    Top Stories This Week

    BlackRock revises spot Bitcoin ETF to enable easier access for banks

    BlackRock has revised its spot Bitcoin exchange-traded fund (ETF) application to make it easier for Wall Street banks to participate by creating new shares in the fund with cash rather than just crypto. The new in-kind redemption “prepay” model will allow banking giants such as JPMorgan or Goldman Sachs to act as authorized participants for the fund, letting them circumvent restrictions that prevent them from holding Bitcoin or crypto directly on their balance sheets.

    El Salvador expects to sell out Bitcoin ‘Freedom Visa’ by end of year

    El Salvador’s National Bitcoin Office says its $1 million Freedom Visa program has already received hundreds of inquiries since its launch on Dec. 7 and expects it to sell out before the end of 2023. Launched by the local government in partnership with stablecoin issuer Tether, the Freedom Visa is a citizenship-by-donation program that grants a residency visa and pathway to citizenship for 1,000 people willing to make a $1 million Bitcoin or Tether donation to the country. The program is limited to 1,000 slots per calendar year.

    Sam Bankman-Fried’s lawyer says FTX fraud trial was “almost impossible” to win: Report

    The lawyer responsible for Sam “SBF” Bankman-Fried’s criminal trial defense has admitted that the case was “almost impossible” to win from the outset. During an interview, Stanford Law School professor David Mills said he recommended the legal defense of SBF admit to the allegations of witnesses and state prosecution and convince the jury that Bankman-Fried intended to save the company. Mills also disclosed that he had agreed to lend his expertise to Bankman-Fried’s defense at the behest of the FTX CEO’s parents, and described Bankman-Fried “as the worst person I’ve ever seen do a cross-examination.”

    Yearn.finance pleads arb traders to return funds after $1.4M multisig mishap

    Yearn.finance is hoping arbitrage traders will return $1.4 million in funds after a multisignature scripting error resulted in a large amount of the protocol’s treasury being drained. The error occurred while Yearn was converting its yVault LP-yCurve — earned from performance fees on vault harvests — into stablecoins on the decentralized exchange CoW Swap. Yearn suffered significant slippage when it received 779,958 DAI yVault tokens from the trade, resulting in a 63% drop in the liquidity pool value.

    SEC pushes deadline for decision on Invesco Galaxy spot Ethereum ETF to 2024

    The United States Securities and Exchange Commission has delayed its decision on whether to approve or reject a spot Ether ETF proposed by Invesco and Galaxy Digital. The companies filed the spot ETH ETF application in September. The proposed spot crypto investment vehicle is one of many being considered by the commission, which, to date, has never approved an ETF with direct exposure to Ether, Bitcoin or other cryptocurrencies.

    Winners and Losers

    At the end of the week, Bitcoin (BTC) is at $42,222, Ether (ETH) at $2,250 and XRP at $0.62. The total market cap is at $1.6 trillion, according to CoinMarketCap.

    Among the biggest 100 cryptocurrencies, the top three altcoin gainers of the week are Bonk (BONK) at 131.38%, WOO Network (WOO) at 78.34% and Helium (HNT) at 77.66%. 

    The top three altcoin losers of the week are Terra Classic (LUNC) at -15.84%, Sei (SEI) at -14.48% and Pepe (PEPE) at -12.10%.

    For more info on crypto prices, make sure to read Cointelegraph’s market analysis.

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    Most Memorable Quotations

    “I’m a big fan of this stablecoin called Tether…I hold their treasuries. So I keep their treasuries, and they have a lot of treasuries.”

    Howard Lutnick, CEO of Cantor Fitzgerald

    “This [blockchain] can be leveraged to ensure proper recycling and handling of waste materials by tracking them from origin to destination.”

    Dominic Williams, founder and chief scientist at Dfinity

    “Digital currencies are the natural evolution of the world’s payment system, and Europe […] is paving the way for this inevitable shift.”

    Michael Novogratz, CEO of Galaxy Digital

    “I thought it was almost impossible to win a case when three or four founders are all saying you did it.”

    David Mills, criminal trial attorney of Sam Bankman-Fried

    “Our bipartisan bill is the toughest proposal on the table cracking down on crypto’s illicit use and giving regulators more tools in their toolbox.”

    Elizabeth Warren, U.S. senator

    “We have to understand that the Central Bank is a scam. What Bitcoin represents is the return of money to its original creation, the private sector.”

    Javier Milei, president of Argentina

    Prediction of the week

    ‘No excuse’ not to long crypto: Arthur Hayes repeats $1M BTC price bet

    Bitcoin and altcoins are a no-brainer bet in the current macro climate, Arthur Hayes says. In a post on X (formerly Twitter) on Dec. 14, the former CEO of exchange BitMEX said that investors have “no excuse” to short crypto.

    Going long on crypto is the key to success as markets bet on the United States Federal Reserve lowering interest rates next year, Hayes argues. “At this point, there is no excuse not to be long crypto,” part of his post stated.

    “How many more times must they tell you that the fiat in your pocket is a filthy piece of trash,” he wrote. Hayes further reiterated a longstanding $1 million BTC price prediction as a result of macro tides eroding the value of national currencies.

    FUD of the Week

    Ledger patches vulnerability after multiple DApps using connector library were compromised

    The front end of multiple decentralized applications using Ledger’s connector were compromised on Dec. 14. Ledger announced that it had fixed the problem three hours after the initial reports about the attack. Protocols affected include Zapper, SushiSwap, Phantom, Balancer and Revoke.cash, stealing at least $484,000 in digital assets. The attacker utilized a phishing exploit to gain access to the computer of a former Ledger employee. The hack sparked criticism about Ledger’s security approach.

    Bitcoin inscriptions added to US National Vulnerability Database

    The National Vulnerability Database flagged Bitcoin’s inscriptions as a cybersecurity risk on Dec. 9, calling attention to the security flaw that enabled the development of the Ordinals Protocol in 2022. According to the database records, a datacarrier limit can be bypassed by masking data as code in some Bitcoin Core and Bitcoin Knots versions. As one of its potential impacts, the vulnerability could result in large amounts of non-transactional data spamming the blockchain, potentially increasing network size and adversely affecting performance and fees.

    SafeMoon falls 31% in five hours after filing for Chapter 7 bankruptcy

    The token of decentralized finance protocol SafeMoon has fallen 31% in five hours after the company behind it filed for bankruptcy. SafeMoon officially applied for Chapter 7 bankruptcy, also known as “liquidation bankruptcy,” on Dec. 14. The latest blow comes only a month after the U.S. Securities and Exchange Commission charged SafeMoon and its executives with violating securities laws in what the regulator described as “a massive fraudulent scheme.” Several former SafeMoon supporters expressed frustration on Reddit regarding the bankruptcy, alleging they were rug-pulled by the SafeMoon developers.

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    Editorial Staff

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  • Miss El Salvador Reps Nation’s Bitcoin Miners With Volcanic Goddess Costume

    Miss El Salvador Reps Nation’s Bitcoin Miners With Volcanic Goddess Costume

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    The 2023 Miss Universe pageant’s preliminary costume contest kicked off on Thursday – and Miss El Salvador’s outfit proved to be a hometown hit.

    The contestant donned a “volcanic empowerment costume” reminiscent of the nation’s signature volcanoes, which are being leveraged by the government to mine Bitcoin (BTC).

    El Salvador and Volcanic Empowerment

    As she took the stage, this year’s Miss El Salvador – Isabella García-Manzo – was welcomed by the San Salvador crowd with thunderous applause.

    Her costume featured a massive crown depicting the sun, and a bright orange dress that turned crimson, then charcoal back toward the train. The crown and back of the dress “ignited” bright orange in the dark, and erupted into a series of bright flames in its final phase.

    Miss El Salvador 2023. Source: @MissUniverso_sv on X

    “It honors the transformative power of nature and the human spirit,” said the pageant’s announcer. “It features an eruption of volcano elements, symbolizing the rebirth of the country.”

    During the costume’s preparation phase, one of its designers called its model a “volcanic goddess.”

    “When I thought about when a volcano eruption happens, and what an eruption represents… something ends, something begins,” she said. “With that in mind, I wanted to still represent the ideals of the volcano.”

    El Salvador has experienced a slew of transformative changes over the past three years – one of which included making Bitcoin legal tender in 2021. Though the use of the currency remains limited on the ground, its adoption has helped double the nation’s tourism figures since 2019.

    Last year’s Miss El Salvador wore an outfit directly related to Bitcoin, including a Bitcoin-themed staff and a coin-shaped Bitcoin suit. Its designer, Francisco Guerrero, said the costume depicted El Salvador’s evolution of currency – from cocoa all the way to BTC.

    El Salvador’s Bitcoin Initiatives

    In 2023, the Salvadoran government announced a major public-private partnership with Volcano Energy to deploy $1 billion toward sustainable Bitcoin mining. Backed by Tether, the initiative will send 23% of the revenue it generates to the government, with another 50% re-deployed toward building out infrastructure.

    Only $250 million has been raised for the initiative so far, which will solely go toward wind and solar-based mining. Geothermal-based mining will be built out down the line.

    One year ago, El Salvador President Nayib Bukele promised that El Salvador would start purchasing 1 BTC per day. Bitcoin’s price has more than doubled since that time.

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  • El Salvador: A nation under hypnosis

    El Salvador: A nation under hypnosis

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    In May, a 40-year-old woman – we’ll call her “Ana” – was arrested in downtown San Salvador, the capital of El Salvador. She presided over a shabby bar and eatery in an area known as the Ex Biblioteca – or Ex-Library – a reference to the institution that had occupied the grounds prior to the devastating earthquake of October 1986.

    Her family has not heard from her since.

    Ana was detained for alleged gang ties, two months into the state of emergency that kicked off on March 27, 2022 in response to a spike in homicides occasioned by a collapse in negotiations between gangs and Nayib Bukele, president of El Salvador and self-proclaimed “coolest dictator in the world”.

    Over the past year, about 66,000 people have been imprisoned in accordance with the “emergency” – most of them condemned to indefinite detention and relieved of even the most basic rights. Many have nothing whatsoever to do with gangs aside from residing in a gang-saturated country.

    As luck would have it, the Ex Biblioteca is now the ex-Ex Biblioteca, if you will, as much of the space has been cleared to make way for Bukele’s vision of a revamped downtown that is more aesthetically pleasing to the international bitcoin crowd he is fervently courting – and other important representatives of “development”, “investment” and similar euphemisms for capitalism’s war on poor people.

    When I spoke recently in San Salvador with a former employee of Ana’s, he dismissed the possibility that she had any gang affiliations but speculated that her arrest had indeed served as a useful warning to other folks in the downtown area to comply with the sweeping “voluntary evictions” that were about to take place.

    To be sure, mass incarceration is one way to temporarily disappear domestic problems, particularly if you also imprison lawyers who defend people accused of gang ties. A case in point is attorney Nubia Morales, who was arrested this month for representing “suspected gang members”.

    And while there is no denying that El Salvador has long been terrorised by gangs, the current obliteration of rights is also definitively terrifying.

    It bears reiterating that the gangs themselves are nothing more than a product of United States policy, Salvadoran state negligence and the good old capitalist war on the poor – all of which serve to underscore that Bukele’s much-celebrated “new reality” is not really anything new at all.

    Over the past several decades, gangs have provided a convenient excuse for all manner of US-backed Salvadoran state repression, including extrajudicial killings by law enforcement personnel. Now, they continue to constitute a handy scapegoat for all societal ills – as well as the justification for a potentially eternal “state of emergency” and suspension of fundamental freedoms.

    Just the other day in downtown San Salvador, I was accosted by a policeman and threatened with five years in prison for having taken a photograph of an apparently inebriated woman who had just been smacked by a private security guard.

    After deleting the image from my phone and my phone’s trash bin and receiving a pompous lecture, I was eventually allowed to go, another manifestation of gringo privilege to which the average Salvadoran obviously cannot aspire.

    A young man from the municipality of Apopa, previously one of the most gang-ridden zones in the San Salvador metropolitan area, recently commented to me that, while it was nice to be able to enter neighbourhoods where he would have once been killed, the “other side of the coin” of the Bukelian emergency was that he could now “be thrown in jail forever for no reason”.

    Meanwhile, Bukele’s international acolytes are having near-orgasms over the option to buy ice cream on the beach using cryptocurrency.

    Call it the other side of the bitcoin.

    As of mid-March, the human rights organisation Cristosal had documented 126 in-custody deaths during the state of emergency although the presumed existence of clandestine graves within detention centres would boost that number even higher.

    Abuse and torture of detainees is rampant, and Bukele himself delights in conspicuously mocking the very concept of human rights on Twitter, his preferred platform for governance.

    One pride and joy of the world’s “coolest dictator” is El Salvador’s new Centre for the Confinement of Terrorism (CECOT), located about 75km (45 miles) southeast of San Salvador, where Bukele has sworn that suspected gang members will disappear for “decades”. With a maximum capacity of 40,000 people, CECOT is said to be the largest such facility in the Americas.

    The jail was built in a record seven months, unhampered by any sort of financial transparency – such is the nature of business in the “new reality”. The week before the one-year anniversary of the state of emergency, I drove out to CECOT with a Salvadoran acquaintance of mine who, as we approached the looming white monstrosity and corresponding military checkpoint, entered into a visible state of panic and swung the car around.

    Back in San Salvador later on, my acquaintance, a former Bukele devotee, confessed to having suddenly experienced a reckoning with the reality that nothing and no one could stop the Salvadoran authorities from locking him up for life if they wished to do so.

    And yet the brand of politics hawked by Bukele, a former advertising executive, enjoys dangerously high approval ratings as many Salvadorans have enthusiastically embraced what amounts to a war on themselves. This seemingly blind rapture, an almost spiritual ecstasy, can perhaps be explained by El Salvador’s contemporary history of unceasing violence and Bukele’s marketing of himself as an instant saviour.

    The day before I drove out to CECOT, I was downtown drinking beer with two Salvadoran friends who were lamenting the “voluntary eviction” of Ana’s spot in the Ex Biblioteca. At one point during our conversation, a young man sitting next to us felt the need to interject his own opinion, which was that we were wrong, Bukele was right, and “modernity and tourism” were all that mattered.

    Judging from his appearance, this young man hailed from El Salvador’s lower socioeconomic echelons, meaning that, if someone were to spontaneously accuse him of gang ties, no amount of “modernity and tourism” was going to save him. Just as no amount of “modernity and tourism” will ultimately save El Salvador from crushing poverty.

    Indeed, what is lost in the present national hypnosis is that poverty kills too.

    On Monday, as Bukele’s crackdown celebrates its first anniversary – and a “new reality” that is neither new nor real continues to destroy a whole lot of lives – there is no end to the state of emergency in sight. And that is the real emergency.

    The views expressed in this article are the author’s own and do not necessarily reflect Al Jazeera’s editorial stance.

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  • El Salvador’s false dilemma | CNN

    El Salvador’s false dilemma | CNN

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    CNN
     — 

    They were stripped down to their boxers and left barefoot. Many had their heads shaved as they were forced to run with their hands behind their back or neck. Altogether, there were 2,000 convicts who were transferred last week to El Salvador’s new “mega prison”, officially named the Center for Confining Terrorism.

    The event was announced not only on national television but by President Nayib Bukele himself, who tweeted a much-discussed video of the transfer set to dramatic music.

    Many in El Salvador (and foreign fans) applauded the footage – more evidence of Bukele’s tough “mano dura” approach to crime. And if critics and the families of those incarcerated found the footage chilling, their arguments found little traction in the country, where Bukele has effectively proposed a false dilemma: either embrace his lock-em-up strategy or relinquish control of the country to murderous criminal groups.

    Last year, after an infamous weekend of killings, Bukele declared a state of emergency with the support of his country’s Legislative Assembly, controlled by his “New Ideas” party. The state of emergency has allowed the government to temporarily suspend constitutional rights, including freedom of assembly and the right to legal defense.

    Under the state of emergency, which has been extended 11 times, suspects can be detained for up to 15 days without being charged, instead of the constitutionally mandated 72 hours. Once charged, a suspect can spend months in detention before facing trial.

    Many of the people arrested under the state of emergency have been charged but not convicted, and receive little opportunity to argue their innocence in El Salvador’s group hearings. At the beginning of January, just over 3,000 detainees had been freed due to lack of evidence – of the over 64,000 people arrested since the state of emergency began.

    Overview of cell blocks during the inauguration of the megaprison on February 2, 2023.

    Criminal gangs in El Salvador trace their origins to those formed in the United States by Salvadoran immigrants fleeing the country’s civil war in the 1980s. More than 330,000 Salvadorans came to the US between 1985 and 1990, according to the Migration Policy Institute.

    In the 1990s, US immigration authorities deported large numbers of MS-13 gang members, many of whom had arrived as children, back to their home countries – El Salvador for most. Once there, these groups metastasized, controlling vast portions of the country and making life miserable for many law-abiding citizens.

    The issue now is not the validity of the crackdown or the decision to free Salvadorans from the scourge of the criminal gangs. For observers, analysts and human rights groups, the question is at what cost? How long will Salvadorans allow the suspension of their basic constitutional rights in the name of security? Are they willing to live under a state of emergency indefinitely?

    For decades, Salvadorans endured criminal gangs that robbed, extorted, killed, raped, and terrorized the population. Now, the vast majority of Salvadorans (and some in Latin American) support their president as the first leader to take the problem seriously.

    In El Salvador, there is little room for criticism or dissent about the state of emergency. In the country of more than six million, you’re either with the president or against him; those who question Bukele’s heavy-handed policy get sternly rebuked by the president’s supporters and the Central American version of cancel culture (in the best of cases). For legislators, questioning his policies would be political suicide; as of November last year, according to a poll by Salvadoran newspaper La Prensa Gráfica, 89% of Salvadoreans approved of their president.

    Bukele has effectively framed critics of his policies as unsympathetic to El Salvador’s bloody and painful history, describing rights groups, for example, as “not interested in the victims, they only defend murderers, as if they enjoyed watching bloodbaths.”

    Media organizations and NGOs that document human rights abuses by his government are “partners of the gang members,” Bukele tells supporters.

    Javier Simán, a former presidential hopeful, said in September 2021 that Bukele was “using the power of the State to go against his critics” and that he was “attacking and delegitimizing civil organizations.” Simán went on to say that Bukele “has used social media, government institutions to target those who criticize his government […] and journalists.”

    In June of last year, Amnesty International published a report that titled “El Salvador: President Bukele submerges his country in a human rights crisis after three years in government.” One section alleges government retaliation against five journalists, including three who “had to moved or leave the country because of government harassment.”

    The same report describes the case of Dolores Almendares, a union leader, who was accused and detained for alleged “illegal meetings”, though his family and colleagues from the union believe that detention could have some link with his defense of labor rights.

    Juan Pappier, Human Rights Watch’s Americas acting deputy director, recently told me that his organization has witnessed some of the abuses committed under Bukele’s policy, including detentions of innocent people.

    “We have documented on the ground that some of these people [the detained] have nothing to do with gangs, are innocent Salvadorians, working people, children who have been arrested and now face Kafkian legal proceedings to prove they have nothing to do with these criminal organizations,” Pappier said.

    Bukele’s office did not respond to multiple requests for comment on this topic. As a matter of policy, the Salvadoran president does not speak to the media, choosing instead to speak out on Twitter, where he often argues that human rights groups are more interested in defending the rights of criminals than law-abiding citizens.

    In a tweet last April, Bukele acknowledged that mistakes had been committed in one case, saying, “There will always be a 1% error that a fair system must correct.”

    But families of many of the detained have been protesting for months, claiming their loved ones were arrested and accused of being gang members simply for being in the wrong place at the wrong time.

    Maribel Flores, the mother of a detained woman, recently joined a group protesting Bukele’s policies at the headquarters of El Salvador’s Office for Human Rights in San Salvador, the capital, demanding an end to what they call “arbitrary detentions.”

    Among those who believe Bukele’s policies are doing more harm than good are Rafael Ruiz and Norma Díaz. They are the parents of five children who live near San Salvador, the capital. They told CNN one of their sons was detained last April and a second one in December. They are now both accused of gang crimes, though their parents insist that they are innocent.

    “They’re practically taking my life,” Díaz told CNN choking up. “My children are not criminals. They’re hard-working, good people.”

    “Little by little, one is consumed by the sadness of trying to find out why their children are in that place [jail]. Maybe they don’t give them medicine, or food, or anything,” Ruiz said.

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  • Photos: Inside El Salvador’s new ‘mega prison’ for gang members

    Photos: Inside El Salvador’s new ‘mega prison’ for gang members

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    The first 2,000 inmates of a new prison built in El Salvador to accommodate more than 40,000 suspected gang members targeted in President Nayib Bukele’s “war” on crime have arrived at the facility.

    Bukele tweeted on Friday: “At dawn, in a single operation, we transferred the first 2,000 members to the Center for the Confinement of Terrorism (CECOT),” which he said is the largest prison in the Americas.

    “This will be their new house, where they will live for decades, all mixed, unable to do any further harm to the population,” the president said.

    Human rights organizations said the state of emergency Bukele has used to make the arrests has led to serious human rights violations. Among them are “mass arbitrary detention, torture and other forms of ill-treatment against detainees, deaths in custody, and abuse-ridden prosecutions”, Human Rights Watch said in a statement.

    Bukele posted a video showing barefoot, tattooed men wearing only white boxers, bent over with their hands behind their shaven heads. Each inmate sat with his legs on either side of the man in front of him as armed guards in balaclavas guarded the prisoners.

    They were loaded onto buses, hands and feet in shackles, to be taken to the new prison in a convoy that included helicopters.

    At the new facility, the men were similarly lined up before being led in large groups into their cells, where they are left sitting on the floor next to stacked metal beds. The warden told journalists while unveiling the facility that no mattresses would be provided.

    “We are eliminating this cancer from society,” Justice and Public Security Minister Gustavo Villatoro said on Twitter about the inmates.

    “Know that you will never walk out of CECOT, you will pay for what you are … cowardly terrorists,” he said.

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  • El Salvador moves 2,000 alleged gang members to new ‘mega prison’

    El Salvador moves 2,000 alleged gang members to new ‘mega prison’

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    The Salvadoran government has been accused of widespread abuses as it waives civil liberties to combat gang activity.

    The Central American nation of El Salvador has transferred 2,000 people accused of gang membership to a recently opened “mega-prison”. The transfer comes after a wave of anti-gang operations in which police swept up more than 64,000 people and key civil liberties were suspended.

    In a Twitter post on Friday, President Nayib Bukele celebrated the arrival of the alleged gang members at the prison, which has space for 40,000 people and is said to be the largest in the Americas.

    “At dawn, in a single operation, we transferred the first 2,000 members to the Center for the Confinement of Terrorism (CECOT),” said Bukele. “This will be their new house, where they will live for decades, all mixed, unable to do any further harm to the population.”

    Bukele and his allies passed a controversial “state of exception” last year, suspending key rights such as the right to a lawyer and the right to private communication. The declaration also allowed police to make arrests without a warrant and without explanation.

    Human rights groups have criticised the measures, accusing the government of empowering itself to act with impunity with little recourse for the wrongfully imprisoned. Dozens of imprisoned people have died during the state of exception, which has been extended several times.

    However, the crackdown has garnered widespread support from Salvadorans. Many credit the measures with curbing the criminal gangs that have inflicted campaigns of violence and exploitation on entire neighbourhoods for decades.

    In a February article, the Salvadoran paper El Faro, which has reported on the alleged abuses during the state of exception, said the government had dealt a serious blow to the gangs, even as it questioned how durable those changes would be.

    “Critics of the state of exception admit, with nuance, that it has produced tangible results for the population,” the article reads. “But they focus the discussion on the future: How will these organizations mutate? How sustainable are the achievements of a policy of repression?”

    Some critics also asked what would happen when those who had been arrested were eventually released from prison.

    On Friday, Bukele and his allies seemed to offer a reply: They won’t be.

    “We are eliminating this cancer from society,” justice and security minister Gustavo Villatoro said on Twitter. “Know that you will never walk out of CECOT, you will pay for what you are … cowardly terrorists.

    The complex, located about 74 kilometres (46 miles) southeast of the capital San Salvador, is made up of eight buildings, each with 32 cells that hold more than 100 people apiece. A single cell, however, only has two sinks and one toilet.

    The prison’s warden, wearing a ski mask to protect his identity, told journalists when the project was unveiled that the cells will not include mattresses.

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  • El Salvador’s Legislature Approves Landmark Digital Securities Bill Paving Way For Bitcoin Bonds

    El Salvador’s Legislature Approves Landmark Digital Securities Bill Paving Way For Bitcoin Bonds

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    El Salvador has voted to pass a bill which paves the way for the issuing of President Nayib Bukele’s bitcoin bonds.

    The plan, which was announced in November 2021, would entail El Salvador issuing $1 billion in bonds on Blockstream’s Liquid Network, a federated Bitcoin sidechain. The goal of the bond issuance would be to invest half of the money into bitcoin, and the other half into infrastructure necessary to build out the bitcoin industry in the Central American country. The bonds, according to the statement at the time, would yield 6.5% and enable a fast-track for investors to acquire citizenship in the country.

    Exactly one year after the announcement of the plan, the bill that was voted on today was introduced by El Salvador’s Minister of the Economy Maria Luisa Hayem Brevé to the country’s legislative assembly as the next step towards this plan. With today’s approval, the country is much closer to making the bitcoin bonds a reality.

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  • 2022 Paved The Way For National Bitcoin Adoption, And 2023 Will Be Even Bigger

    2022 Paved The Way For National Bitcoin Adoption, And 2023 Will Be Even Bigger

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    This is an opinion editorial by Samson Mow, CEO of JAN3 and former CSO of Blockstream.

    Approximately one year ago, I had the opportunity to speak at Feel The Bit in El Salvador alongside President Bukele. During the event, we announced the Bitcoin Volcano Bonds, while President Bukele made a significant announcement of his own: the creation of Bitcoin City. By legally recognizing bitcoin as tender and establishing Bitcoin City, President Bukele took a bold step toward nationwide adoption. This decision has helped to accelerate the timeline for bitcoin becoming a recognized currency on a national level.

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    Samson Mow

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  • Visiting El Salvador’s Slums, It’s Clear Bitcoin Country Must Go Further

    Visiting El Salvador’s Slums, It’s Clear Bitcoin Country Must Go Further

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    This is an opinion editorial by Rikki, author and co-host of the “Bitcoin Italia,” and “Stupefatti” podcasts. He is one half of the Bitcoin Explorers, along with Laura, who chronicle Bitcoin adoption around the world, one country at a time.

    A few days before this writing, El Salvador’s president Nayib Bukele announced an immense police operation. San Salvador’s satellite city of Soyapango was surrounded by 8,500 military and 1,500 police officers, who went searching from house to house for gang members still hiding in the area. More than 150 arrests were counted.

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    Rikki

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  • Adopting Bitcoin: El Salvador Has Work To Do, But The Experiment Is Worth Celebrating

    Adopting Bitcoin: El Salvador Has Work To Do, But The Experiment Is Worth Celebrating

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    This is an opinion editorial by Rikki, author and co-host of the “Bitcoin Italia,” and “Stupefatti” podcasts. He is one half of the Bitcoin Explorers, along with Laura, who chronicle Bitcoin adoption around the world, one country at a time.

    On the road again. Direction: San Salvador. The Bitcoin community is about to gather here for Adopting Bitcoin, the final major Bitcoin conference of the year, but certainly not the least. Friends and Bitcoiners from around the world are flying into the country to work together and promote Bitcoin adoption. Who knows how many of them knew much about this country before the “Ley Bitcoin” was implemented?

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    Rikki

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  • Visiting El Salvador, It’s Clear That Bukele’s Bitcoin Country Is Neither Utopian, Nor Totalitarian

    Visiting El Salvador, It’s Clear That Bukele’s Bitcoin Country Is Neither Utopian, Nor Totalitarian

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    This is an opinion editorial by Shinobi, a self-taught educator in the Bitcoin space and tech-oriented Bitcoin podcast host.

    I recently spent a week in El Salvador to attend Adopting Bitcoin and decided it might be worthwhile to summarize my perception of things having actually had the chance to visit the country myself.

    Since the announcement of the Bitcoin legal tender law in 2021, the topic of El Salvador has been a deeply divisive one in this space. On one hand, you have people blindly cheering on President Nayib Bukele and treating all criticism as FUD and misinformation generated simply to attack Bitcoin and the use of it. On the other hand, you have people blindly decrying him as a dictator and violator of human rights and treating anything positive he is accomplishing for his country as irrelevant in the face of his disregard for law.

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  • Honduras declares state of emergency against gang crime

    Honduras declares state of emergency against gang crime

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    TEGUCIGALPA, Honduras — Honduras became the second country in Central America to declare a state of emergency to fight gang crimes like extortion.

    For years, street gangs have charged protection money from bus and taxi drivers and store owners in Honduras, as in neighboring El Salvador.

    Late Thursday, Honduran President Xiomara Castro proposed a measure to limit constitutional rights so as to round up gang members.

    “This social democratic government is declaring war on extorsion, just as it has, since the first day, declared wars on corruption, impunity and drug trafficking,” Castro said. The measure must still be approved by Congress. “We are going to eradicate extortion in every corner of our country.”

    On Friday, Jorge Lanza the leader of the bus operators in Honduras, supported the move, saying bus drivers were tired of being threatened and killed for not paying protection money. Lanza said drivers had been asking for a crackdown for years.

    “We can’t put up any longer with workers being killed and paying extortion,” Lanza said. “We hope these measures work and remain in place.”

    Lanza said that 50 drivers have been killed so far in 2022, and a total of 2,500 have been killed over the last 15 years. He estimated the companies and drivers have paid an average of about $10 million per month to the gangs in order to operate.

    Honduras hasn’t specified exactly what the state of emergency would entail, but normally such measures temporarily suspend normal rules regulating arrests and searches; sometime limits on freedom of speech and assembly are implemented as well.

    In neighboring El Salvador, President Nayib Bukele requested Congress grant him extraordinary powers after gangs were blamed for 62 killings on March 26, and that emergency decree has been renewed every month since then. It suspends some Constitutional rights and gives police more powers to arrest and hold suspects.

    That measure has proved popular among the public in El Salvador, and has resulted in the arrest of more than 56,000 people for alleged gang ties.

    But nongovernmental organizations have tallied several thousand human rights violations and at least 80 in-custody deaths of people arrested during the state of exception.

    Rights activists say young men are frequently arrested just based on their age, appearance or whether they live in a gang-dominated slum.

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