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Related: About this forumThe long read:How the US helped create El Salvador's bloody gang war
The long read
How the US helped create El Salvadors bloody gang war
The story of El Salvadors gang problem is a study in shortsighted thinking and Donald Trumps policies threaten to make a bad situation even worse. By William Wheeler
Fri 10 Jan 2020 01.00 EST
Israel Ticas is racing down the highway, drumming his hands on the wheel of The Beast, a tall, boxy police truck that he aims at the small, bustling town of San Luis Talpa, about 25 miles south of El Salvadors capital, San Salvador.
A decades-long veteran of the security forces, Ticass first job was as an artist in the counter-terrorism unit, sketching suspected guerillas during the countrys 19791992 civil war. The experience left him equally as distrustful of the rightwing generals he had served as of the guerrilla commanders who would join them among the political elite at wars end. In most ways, the country has never quite recovered since. In 2015, homicides in El Salvador rivalled the most violent peak of the civil war, and it ranks consistently among the worlds most violent nations. Before long, Ticas spots a body by the roadside. Its fresh, he observes. With clothes on. It hasnt been stripped or dismembered. The victim, he says, was likely shot at that spot during the night.
Ticas calls himself a lawyer for the dead. A self-taught forensic criminologist, he locates and digs up the bodies of victims of gang killings, and in so doing, he documents the crimes of the countrys notorious maras, or gangs. On this hot March morning in 2018, his finger is wrapped thick with gauze a few days earlier, he pricked it on a thorn covered in fluids from decomposing bodies. His belt is adorned with a skull-and-crossbones pattern. As always, he carries a pistol in a handbag at his side.
But we arent here for the body by the roadside. Instead, we stop outside a two-storey concrete building where men in blue-and-white camouflage uniforms armed with assault rifles are milling about. Our security detail piles into a Toyota Hilux, and we follow them zig-zagging out of town and into the surrounding sugar cane fields, the convoy kicking up a bright cloud of swirling dust. Our destination is a site used by members of the local MS-13 gang to rape, torture and execute people. The victims include civilians, rivals from the Barrio 18 gang, and their own members who break internal codes of discipline. After a few minutes, the convoy stops at a parched basin beside the fields, a spot where a river runs during the wetter months.
More:
https://www.theguardian.com/news/2020/jan/10/how-the-us-helped-create-el-salvadors-bloody-gang-war
Also posted in Editorials and other articles:
https://www.democraticunderground.com/1016245600
marble falls
(57,204 posts)El Salvador.