Sunday, January 10, 2016

Canadian prime minister Justin Trudeau condemns attack on Syrian refugees

Syrian refugees, including children, were pepper-sprayed during an event at a Muslim centre in Vancouver, an incident police are treating as a hate crime
Canadian Prime Minister Justin Trudeau on Saturday condemned an attack on Syrian refugees who were pepper-sprayed during a welcome event in Vancouver, an incident police are treating as a hate crime.
The group of newly arrived Syrians, which included children, was sprayed by an unknown bicyclist as they gathered outdoors on Friday for a welcome function at the Muslim Association of Canada Centre, Vancouver police said.
“This isn’t who we are – and doesn’t reflect the warm welcome Canadians have offered,” Trudeau wrote on Twitter on Saturday.
“I condemn the attack on Syrian refugees in Vancouver.”
Police said “a number of people” were treated by paramedics and the Vancouver fire and rescue service for pepper spray exposure.
Public broadcaster CBC said up to 30 people were affected.
“Although the motive for the pepper-spraying is unknown at this time, investigators are treating it as a hate-motivated crime, until determined otherwise,” the Vancouver police department said in a statement.
Vancouver mayor Gregor Robertson tweeted that the incident “was a disgusting display of hate – and Vancouver won’t stand for it.”
VPD is carrying out an investigation and searching for the perpetrator, who is thought to have been wearing a white hooded sweatshirt.
No arrests have been made, it said.
“This is an act of cowardice condemned by all Canadians of conscience,” board chair for the National Council of Canadian Muslims, Kashif Ahmed, said in a statement.
The Canadian government said it welcomed more than 6,000 Syrian refugees by the end of 2015 but fell short of its pledge to take in 10,000. It vowed, however, to meet that target in January.
Canada takes in an average of 250,000 refugees from around the world each year.

Venezuela army vows 'absolute loyalty' to President Maduro

Venezuela’s military pledged loyalty to President Nicolas Maduro on Thursday, ramping up a high-stakes standoff between his socialist government and a centre-right opposition that has vowed to use its new legislative powers to oust him.

The opposition laid claim to a big majority in the National Assembly, which could empower it to force out Maduro. He has rejected the assembly as illegal and formed a new hardline leftist cabinet to fight it, in a deepening political crisis.
Venezuela’s defense minister and armed forces chief, General Vladimir Padrino, weighed in, saying the military was unwavering in its backing for Maduro—who has vowed to resist “with an iron hand.”
“The president is the highest authority of the state and we reiterate our absolute loyalty and unconditional support for him,” said Padrino, after the under-pressure government sued to stop the emboldened opposition using its newfound powers to kick out Maduro.
The pledge from the armed forces will only ratchet up fears of unrest in the South American oil-producing country, which is stricken by recession, shortages and rampant crime.
The new speaker of the congress, Henry Ramos Allup, said on Twitter that two premises of his Democratic Action party were attacked with explosive devices, but no one was hurt and no damage reported. He said police were investigating.
Padrino lashed out at the opposition after Ramos Allup had portraits of late president and socialist icon Hugo Chavez removed from the assembly building on Wednesday.
“This is an outrage to military honor,” he warned.
The government side also responded by pledging to fill the streets of Caracas with pictures of Chavez and of Simon Bolivar, Venezuela’s 19th-century independence hero.
‘Illegal parliament’
On a day of fast-moving developments in Venezuela, Maduro’s side applied to the Supreme Court to declare null any legislation passed by the opposition-controlled congress.
Maduro supporters say the opposition’s two-thirds majority in the assembly is not legitimate since it swore in three lawmakers whom the court had ordered to be suspended pending allegations of electoral fraud.
“The decisions made in that circus they have set up should be ignored,” said pro-government deputy Pedro Carreno at the court, where he presented the suit.
“This is an illegal parliament and therefore its decisions are illegal and null.”
He accused the opposition of planning a “coup d’etat” and being in contempt of court.
Ramos Allup rejected the charge.
“The ones who are in contempt are the ones who have disregarded the public will after the elections,” he said.
The opposition MUD coalition won a majority in the assembly for the first time in nearly 17 years at elections on December 6.
The MUD has vowed to find a way within six months to get rid of Maduro by constitutional means. But Maduro’s side vowed to block it by suing, withholding funding and refusing to publish its legislation.
“They give us six months to survive. You need balls to carry out a coup d’etat. We’ll see if they have any,” said Diosdado Cabello, the number two in Maduro’s leadership.
“Get ready for a long struggle.”
Bleak economic outlook
As the battle lines formed, Maduro reshuffled his cabinet, filling key posts with defenders of the socialist “revolution” launched by his late predecessor Chavez.
Facing a “new stage of the revolution” and a “bourgeois legislature,” Maduro said his new cabinet team would work on the “grave economic situation.”
He appointed hardline socialists to the key posts of economy, finance and foreign trade and investment, while keeping in place his oil minister.
He named economist Luis Salas economy minister.
Ramos Allup said the opposition too would present urgent economic proposals.
Analysts warn the political deadlock will compound the hardship of Venezuelans who are suffering shortages of basic goods and soaring inflation.
Plunging oil prices have sharply curbed the country’s revenues.
“The president’s support for the radical ideological wing of Chavismo, sidelining pragmatists, does not generate positive expectations for change,” said analyst Luis Vicente Leon, head of polling firm Datanalisis.
“Expectations of institutional conflict increase the negative outlook for the nation’s economy.”
One of the first measures the opposition wants to pass is an amnesty for 75 political prisoners, a plan backed by the United States. Maduro has vowed to veto that move.

Actor Sean Penn's meeting with 'El Chapo' led to drug lord's capture

The recapture of drug lord Joaquin "El Chapo" Guzman took a surprise, Hollywood-like twist when a Mexican official said security forces located the world's most-wanted trafficker thanks to a secret meeting with U.S. actor Sean Penn.
Penn's article about his meeting with Guzman, who has twice escaped from Mexican maximum security prisons, appeared late Saturday on the website of Rolling Stone magazine. It was purportedly held at an undisclosed hideout in northern Mexico in late 2015, several months before Guzman's recapture Friday in Los Mochis, Sinaloa, after six months on the run.
The article reports that Guzman defends his work at the head of the world's biggest drug trafficking organization. When asked if he is to blame for high addiction rates, he responds: "No, that is false, because the day I don't exist, it's not going to decrease in any way at all. Drug trafficking? That's false."
In the article, Penn describes taking elaborate security measures ahead of the clandestine meeting. But apparently they were not enough.
A Mexican federal law enforcement official, speaking on condition of anonymity because he was not permitted to comment on the issue, told the Associated Press it was the Penn meeting that led authorities to Guzman in a rural part of Durango state in October.
Authorities who later raided the area decided not to open fire on Guzman because he was with two women and child. He was able to escape, but they were able to later track him to a house in Los Mochis where Mexican marines nabbed him after a shootout that left five people dead.
The official said the meeting between Penn and Guzman was held in Tamazula, a community in Durango state that neighbors Sinaloa, home of Guzman's drug cartel.
On Friday, Mexican Attorney General Arely Gomez said that Guzman's contact with actors and producers for a possible film about him helped give law enforcement a lead on tracking and capturing the world's most notorious drug kingpin.
In the Rolling Stone article, Penn wrote that Guzman was interested in having a movie filmed on his life. He said Guzman wanted Mexican actress Kate del Castillo, who facilitated the meeting between the men, involved in the project.
"He was interested in seeing the story of his life told on film, but would entrust its telling only to Kate," wrote Penn, who appears in a photo posted with the article shaking hands with Guzman whose face is uncovered
There was no immediate response from Penn's representatives to the Mexican official's comments.
Earlier Saturday, a federal law enforcement official said that Mexico is willing to extradite Guzman to the United States, a sharp reversal from the official position after his last capture in 2014.
"Mexico is ready. There are plans to cooperate with the U.S.," said the Mexican official, who spoke on condition anonymity because he wasn't authorized to comment.
But he cautioned that there could be a lengthy wait before U.S. prosecutors get their hands on Guzman. "You have to go through the judicial process, and the defense has its elements too."
Top officials in the party of President Enrique Pena Nieto also floated the idea of extradition, which they had flatly ruled out before Guzman's embarrassing escape from Mexico's top maximum security prison on July 11 — his second from a Mexican prison.
But even if Mexican officials agree, Guzman's attorney Juan Pablo Badillo told the Milenio newspaper that the defense already has filed six motions to challenge extradition requests.
"They can challenge the judge, challenge the probable cause, challenge the procedure," said Juan Masini, former U.S. Department of Justice attache at the U.S. Embassy in Mexico. "That's why it can take a long time. They won't challenge everything at once ... they can drip, drip, milk it that way."
Guzman faces drug trafficking charges in several U.S. states and American officials hoped to extradite him after he was captured in February 2014.
At the time, Mexico's government insisted it could handle the man who had already broken out of one maximum-security prison, saying he must pay his debt to Mexican society first.
Then-Attorney General Jesus Murillo Karam said the extradition would happen only after he finished his sentence in Mexico in "300 or 400 years."
Then Guzman escaped through an elaborate tunnel dug into Mexico's most secure lock-up on July 11, thoroughly embarrassing Pena Nieto's administration.
He also had escaped a similar maximum-security facility in 2001 while serving a 20-year sentence. Lore says he hid in a laundry cart, though many dispute that version. He spent 13 years on the lam.
Gomez said that one of Guzman's key tunnel builders led officials to the neighborhood in Los Mochis that authorities had been watching for a month. The team noticed a lot of activity at the houseWednesday and the arrival of a car early Thursday morning. Authorities were able to determine that Guzman was inside the house, she said.
The marines were met with gunfire as they closed in.
Gomez said Guzman and his security chief, Ivan Gastelum, a.k.a "El Cholo Ivan," were able to flee via storm drains and escape through a manhole cover to the street, where they commandeered getaway cars. Marines climbed into the drains in pursuit. They closed in on the two men based on reports of stolen vehicles and they were arrested on the highway.
According to a statement from the Mexican Attorney General's office, the U.S. filed extradition requests June 25, while Guzman was in custody, and another Sep. 3, after he escaped. The Mexican government determined they were valid within the extradition treaty and sent them to a panel of federal judges, who gave orders for detention on July 29 and Sept. 8, after Guzman had escaped.
Those orders were not for extradition but just for Guzman to begin the extradition hearing process. Now that he is recaptured, Mexico has to start processing the extradition requests anew, according to the law.
The quickest he could be extradited would be six months, said a federal official who spoke on condition of anonymity, but it's not likely because lawyers can file appeals. He said that they are usually turned down, but each one means a judge has to schedule a hearing.
"That can take weeks or months, and that delays the extradition," he said. "We've had cases that take six years."

Friday, January 8, 2016

Mexico recaptures escaped drug lord ‘El Chapo’ Guzman

Mexican authorities have recaptured fugitive drug kingpin Joaquin "El Chapo" Guzman, six months after his prison break, President Enrique Pena Nieto said on Friday, triumphantly declaring "mission accomplished."

Mexican marines have conducted extensive operations in the northwestern states of Sinaloa and Durango in search of Guzman since the 58-year-old drug lord's spectacular July 11 escape.
But neither Pena Nieto nor other authorities gave immediate details about the location and day of the Sinaloa drug cartel leader's arrest.
Pena Nieto's arrest makes for a major sigh of relief for the president, whose administration was humiliated by Guzman's prison break.
"Mission accomplished: We got him. I want to inform Mexicans that Joaquin Guzman Loera has been arrested," Pena Nieto wrote on Twitter, without elaborating.
A presidential spokesman confirmed the authenticity of the tweet to AFP, but declined to say more, adding that a press conference would be held later Friday.
Clash in Sinaloa
News of his arrest came shortly after the navy reported that five suspects were killed in a clash with marines in the Sinaloa city of Los Mochis, but it did not indicate whether it was related to Guzman.
Six people were detained after the shootout, which broke out when marines were tipped off about the presence of armed men in a home, the navy said in a statement.
A suspected gang leader identified as Orso Ivan Gastelum Cruz was in the house but managed to escape, the navy said.
On July 11, after 17 months at the Altiplano maximum-security prison in central Mexico, Guzman slipped through a hole in his cell's shower, climbed on a motorcycle mounted on rails, and traveled 1.5 kilometers (one mile) through a tunnel.
US and Mexican law enforcement officials say Guzman then flew to his home turf at the Sinaloa-Durango state border, where he is revered as a modern-day Robin Hood.
More than a dozen prison and federal police officials have been arrested on charges of helping Guzman flee, along with several associates of the drug lord who worked from the outside on building the tunnel.
Marines nearly recaptured him in October in a remote mountain region straddling the two states. Authorities said Guzman injured his face and a leg while falling in the rough terrain, but special forces failed to nab him.
Guzman had been captured on February 22, 2014, in the Sinaloa resort of Mazatlan. He was found in a condo with his wife and their young twin daughters.
He had been on the lam for 13 years after escaping a first time in 2001 from another prison, in western Jalisco state, by hiding in a laundry cart. He had spent eight years in prison following his 1993 capture in Guatemala.
Questions will now likely turn on whether Mexico will extradite Guzman to the United States.
Pena Nieto had refused to hand Guzman over to the United States before his escape, but the authorities have since then secured an arrest warrant to extradite him.
'Lord of tunnels'
The man whose old nickname means "Shorty" had used the money from a drug empire whose tentacles reach Europe and Asia to dig himself out of trouble.
He is a legend of Mexico's underworld, with musicians singing his praises in folk ballads known as "narcocorridos," tributes to drug capos.
With his daring underground escapes and ability to sneak narcotics under the US-Mexico border, he also earned the nickname of "Lord of the Tunnels."
The bathtub in one of his houses in Culiacan, capital of Sinaloa, opened into an escape route into drainage systems that he used to flee from troops in early 2014.
US and Mexican authorities have regularly discover sophisticated tunnels with rails and electricity to ship marijuana, cocaine and other drugs into the United States, with cash and weapons coming the other way.
Born on April 4, 1957, to a family of farmers in La Tuna, Guzman had humble beginnings in a region known as a bastion of drug trafficking.
He dropped out of primary school to work in marijuana and opium poppy fields as drug consumption rose in the neighboring United States.
He was recruited by Guadalajara cartel boss Miguel Angel Felix Gallardo, the godfather of Mexico's modern drug cartels.
After Felix Gallardo was arrested in 1989, Guzman's Sinaloa drug cartel began its meteoric rise.
The mustachioed drug lord married an 18-year-old beauty queen, Emma Coronel, in 2007 and is believed to have 10 children with various women.
Guzman's family has paid dearly for his life of crime. One of his brothers was killed in a Mexican jail in December 2004 and a son was shot dead in a Culiacan shopping center parking lot in May 2008.
(AFP)

Thursday, January 7, 2016

Over 100,000 flee flooding in Paraguay, Argentina, Brazil, Uruguay

ASUNCION/BUENOS AIRES (Reuters) - More than 100,000 people have had to evacuate from their homes in the bordering areas of Paraguay, Uruguay, Brazil and Argentina due to severe flooding in the wake of heavy summer rains brought on by El Niño, authorities said on Saturday.
In the worse affected country, Paraguay, around 90,000 people in the area around the capital city of Asuncion have been evacuated, the municipal Emergencies Office said. Many are poor families living in precarious housing along the banks of the River Paraguay.
The Paraguayan government has declared a state of emergency in Asuncion and seven regions of the country to free up funds to help those affected. Several people have been killed by trees falling in the storms that caused the flooding, local media reported. There was no official death toll yet.
In Alberdi, some 120 kilometers (75 miles) south of Asuncion, the government recommended that several thousand more people living along the banks of the River Paraguay evacuate.
"(The flooding) was directly influenced by the El Niño phenomenon which has intensified the frequency and intensity of rains," the national Emergencies Office said.
This year's "El Nino," which sparks global climate extremes, is the worst in more than 15 years, the U.N. weather agency, the World Meteorological Organization (WMO), said last month.
"Severe droughts and devastating flooding being experienced throughout the tropics and sub-tropical zones bear the hallmarks of this El Nino, which is the strongest in more than 15 years," WMO chief Michel Jarraud said in a statement.
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Officials at Paraguay's Emergencies Office said the river might rise even more in the coming days, stabilizing and falling back towards normal levels from January onwards.
BAD INFRASTRUCTURE
In northern Argentina, around 20,000 people have also had to abandon their homes, the government said on Saturday.
"We are going to have a few complicated months, the consequences will be serious," said Ricardo Colombi, the governor of the Corrientes region, after flying over the worst affected areas with national Cabinet Chief Marcos Pena.
Pena said national government aid was already on its way and the new president, Mauricio Macri, who took office earlier this month, intended to make improving infrastructure a priority so that such flooding did not occur again.
"Argentina has a very big lack of infrastructure," he said. Macri will visit the flooded areas on Sunday.
In Uruguay, more than 9,000 people have had to flee their homes, according to the national Emergencies Office, which added that it expected water levels to remain at their current level for several days before subsiding.
At least four people have died in Argentina and Uruguay due to the storms and floods, according to local media reports. One was reported to have drowned while another was electrocuted by a fallen power cable.
Brazil's President Dilma Rousseff also flew over the flooded areas on the border with Argentina and Uruguay on Saturday morning. Rio Grande do Sul state Civil Defense said 1,795 people were left homeless there after 38 towns were affected by heavy rains.

(Additional reporting by Matias Larramendi in Montevideo and Anthony Boadle in Brasilia; Writing by Sarah Marsh; Editing by Sandra Maler)

Israel presses Brazil to accept pro-settler envoy

JERUSALEM/BRASILIA (Reuters) - Brazil's reluctance to accept an Israeli ambassador who is a West Bank settler has set off a diplomatic crisis and led to concerns in the Israeli government that the clash could encourage pro-Palestinian activism against it.
The appointment four months ago of Dani Dayan, a former head of the Jewish settlement movement, did not go down well with Brazil's left-leaning government, which has supported Palestinian statehood in recent years.
Most world powers deem the Jewish settlements illegal.
Israel's previous ambassador, Reda Mansour, left Brasilia last week and the Israeli government said on Sunday Brazil risked degrading bilateral relations if Dayan were not allowed to succeed him.
"The State of Israel will leave the level of diplomatic relations with Brazil at the secondary level if the appointment of Dani Dayan is not confirmed," Deputy Foreign Minister Tzipi Hotovely told Israel’s Channel 10 TV, saying Dayan would remain the sole nominee. 
She said Israel would lobby Brasilia through the Brazilian Jewish community, confidants of President Dilma Rousseff and direct appeals from Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu.
Brazilian government officials declined to comment on whether Rousseff will accept the nomination of the Argentine-born Dayan. But one senior Foreign Ministry official told Reuters: "I do not see that happening." 
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The official, who asked not to be named because he was not authorized to speak on the matter, said Israel would have to choose a different envoy because the choice of Dayan has further worsened relations that turned sour in 2010 when Brazil decided to recognize Palestinian statehood in the West Bank, East Jerusalem, and the Gaza Strip, which Israel captured in a 1967 war and settled.
Israel quit Gaza in 2005 but claims East Jerusalem as its indivisible capital and wants to keep swathes of West Bank settlements under any eventual peace deal with the Palestinians.
Rousseff's predecessor, Luiz Inacio Lula da Silva, angered Israel by drawing Brazil closer to Iran.
Tensions rose last year when an Israeli foreign ministry spokesman called Brazil a "diplomatic dwarf" after Brasilia
recalled its ambassador from Israel to protest a military offensive in Gaza.
Brazil's government was also angered by the announcement of Dayan's appointment by Netanyahu in a Twitter message on Aug. 5 before Brasilia had been informed, let alone agreed to the new envoy as is the diplomatic norm.
Over the weekend, Dayan went on the offensive to defend his nomination, telling Israeli media that Netanyahu's government was not doing enough to press Brazil to accept him. Dayan said not doing so could create a precedent barring settlers from representing Israel abroad. 
Emmanuel Nahshon, spokesman for Israel's Foreign Ministry, said ties with Brazil were "good and important", noting Israel's recent opening of a new consulate in Brazil and the business opportunities for Israeli security firms during the Olympic Games to be held in Rio de Janeiro in August.
Israel has a considerable role in providing avionics technology for Brazil's aerospace and defense industry. 
Celso Amorim, a former Brazilian foreign and defense minister, said on Friday that the diplomatic dispute over Dayan's appointment showed that "it is time the Brazilian armed forces reduced their dependence on Israel."

(Reporting by Dan Williams and Anthony Boadle; editing by Adrian Croft

Brazil cuts vaccine doses as health system under pressure

RIO DE JANEIRO (Reuters) - Brazil has cut the number of doses for vaccinations given by the public health service to counter human papillomavirus (HPV) and pneumonia, as Latin America's largest economy looks to reduce health costs in the midst of a deep recession.
In a statement late Tuesday, the Health Ministry said the changes were "routine" and would not alter the efficacy of the vaccinations but also noted the cost of the national program had risen 140 percent over the past five years. 
In 2015, the cost of distributing nearly 300 million immunobiologicals, such as vaccines, totaled 2.9 billion reais ($720 million), the ministry said.
Sources familiar with the matter said Brazil has been reducing imports of vaccines over the past year, resulting in diminishing stocks.
The ministry did not say how much money would be saved by reducing the number of doses.
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Brazil's health system has been hit hard by falling government revenues. The state of Rio de Janeiro declared a state of emergency in December after it ran out of money to pay for equipment, supplies and salaries.
Revenues for the state, which is Brazil's main petroleum oil hub, have been particularly hard hit by a slump in international petroleum prices.
The health ministry said the doses for vaccination against HPV, a group of sexually transmitted viruses that can cause cancer, will be reduced to two from three. 
The doses for vaccines given to babies to fend off pneumonia will be cut to two, with a booster, from three and a booster. 

(Reporting by Stephen Eisenhammer; Editing by Daniel Flynn and Jeffrey Benkoe)

Ex-Guatemalan officials arrested over civil war killings and abuses

Guatemalan prosecutors have announced the arrest of more than a dozen former military and government officials for alleged crimes against humanity committed during Guatemala’s civil war, and initiated human rights proceedings against an ally of President-elect Jimmy Morales.
Among the 14 people detained was Benedicto Lucas Garcia, a former army commander credited with founding paramilitary groups during the 1960-1996 conflict. He is also the brother of the late president Fernando Romeo Lucas García, who ruled Guatemala with an iron fist from 1978 to 1982.
Also detained were retired general Francisco Luis Gordillo, who helped bring former dictator Jose Efrain Rios Montt to power from 1982 to 1983, and Byron Barrientos, who was interior minister during the 2000-2004 presidency of Alfonso Portillo.
The suspects face charges of crimes against humanity involving massacres and disappearances of people by security forces under their command. They were ordered held in a military base prison ahead of a court hearing expected Friday. 
“The cases that we have documented were (attacks) against the non-combatant civilian population including children,” attorney general Thelma Aldana said. She described them as among “the largest forced disappearances in Latin America”.
Guatemalan media broadcast images of the former officials in handcuffs, some of them crying and saying their work during the war only involved fighting guerrilla bands.
“If I killed, I killed in combat, leading my troops and not as a coward or anything like that,” Lucas told reporters at the courthouse.
Prosecutors also moved to have the immunity of office lifted for Edgar Justino Ovalle, a member and co-founder of the party of Morales, who is scheduled to be inaugurated as president next week. As a sitting congressman, Ovalle is not subject to criminal prosecution unless lawmakers vote to end his immunity.
Peace accords brought an end to the 36-year civil war in 1996. Government security forces have been blamed for the vast majority of the 245,000 killings and disappearances during the conflict.
The detentions involve incidents such as the 1982 massacre at Plan de Sánchez, Baja Verapaz department, in which soldiers and militia members tortured, sexually abused and killed local residents.

Violent deaths in El Salvador spiked 70% in 2015, figures reveal

At least 6,657 people were violently killed in the Central American country, making last year the most violent since the height of 1983 civil war

El Salvador saw a 70% spike in violent deaths in 2015, making last year the bloodiest since the country’s civil war, according to figures released on Monday by the country’s authorities. 
At least 6,657 people were violently killed in 2015, amid a rise in mass killings and escalating violence between alleged gang members and police in the Central American country.


The overall murder rate rose to 104 per 100,000 habitants, compared to 1 per 100,000 in the UK and 90 per 100,000 in Venezuela – the second most murderous country in 2015. El Salvador has a population of approximately 6.4 million.
August was the most violent month, with more than 900 killings, including an unprecedented 52 deaths registered in a single day. The population of El Salvador is around 6 million.
Last year’s death toll is the highest recorded since 1983, at the height of a 12-year civil war that pitted a US-backed military dictatorship against leftwing guerrilla groups.
That conflict left an estimated 75,000 people dead, 1m displaced and thousands more disappeared, according to the UN Truth Commission.
A peace deal in 1992 led the guerrillas to disband but never resolved underlying problems of inequality and weak institutions, and the violence has continued.
Authorities routinely blame the current killings on warring street gangs involved in territory disputes and extortion rings. Murders fell by half after the 2012 government negotiated truce between the two biggest street gangs Calle 18 and Mara Salvatrucha 13, and have soared since the pact unravelled in 2014.
But growing evidence has emerged of extrajudicial killings carried out by police against alleged gang members.
Forensic experts have described other cases from 2015 in which alleged armed gang members were actually shot in the back. But investigators are not permitted to carry out independent ballistics investigations in police killings as this remains the jurisdiction of the National Police (PNC).In March, eight unarmed people weresummarily executed by police at the San Blas farm, about 18 miles south of the capital, San Salvador, according toa damning exposé by respected investigative news website El Faro. The scene was tampered with to make it seem that the victims had died in a gun battle as claimed by the police, the investigation found.
Steven Dudley, co-director of InSight Crime, told the Guardian: “The end of the truce caused a series of ruptures in both the gangs and the security forces. The gangs fragmented and the security forces radicalized and have begun using extra-judicial means to deal with the gangs.”
At times in the past year, parts of El Salvador have resembled war zones, as 6,000 soldiers were deployed on the streets alongside 23,000 police officers. Truckloads of masked security forces armed with machine guns patrol carry out house to house searches, looking for gang members.
In August, the capital came to a standstill as terrified workers were forced to stay home after gang leaders orchestrated a forced public transport boycott by killing a dozen bus drivers in response to a crackdown by authorities against organised crime.
A string of improvised explosive devices (IEDs) and hand-grenade attacks targeting police and government buildings added to the terror.
The current violence is mostly concentrated in cities and semi-urban areas, but the gangs are rapidly and violently expanding into even the smallest rural communities in order to run extortion rings and control territory.
Celia Medrano, chief programme officer at the human rights group Foundation Cristosal, told the Guardian: “We’re living with the same levels of human drama that we did during the 80s, but the level of insecurity and fear is actually worse because violence is spread across the country.”