Nayib Bukele – Artifex.News https://artifex.news Stay Connected. Stay Informed. Sat, 03 Jan 2026 03:28:00 +0000 en-US hourly 1 https://wordpress.org/?v=7.0 https://artifex.news/wp-content/uploads/2026/05/cropped-cropped-app-logo-32x32.png Nayib Bukele – Artifex.News https://artifex.news 32 32 Salvadoran journalist arrested in Spain: press group https://artifex.news/article70466451-ece/ Sat, 03 Jan 2026 03:28:00 +0000 https://artifex.news/article70466451-ece/ Read More “Salvadoran journalist arrested in Spain: press group” »

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A Salvadoran photo journalist was arrested Friday (January 2, 2025) in Spain under an international warrant while requesting asylum, a press association said.

Over the past six months, at least 50 journalists have fled El Salvador out of fear of being arrested for criticising President Nayib Bukele, who calls himself “the world’s coolest dictator,” the Salvadoran Press Association said.

The photographer, identified as 25-year-old Diego Andres Rosa Rosales, was filing papers for asylum at a police station in Seville when he was arrested under an Interpol warrant initiated by Bukele’s government, the association said in a post on social media platform X.

In El Salvador, Mr. Rosa has been subject to police harassment, threats and baseless charges of criminal association, the association said.

The latter charge is what Mr. Bukele applies to alleged members of street gangs, using it to jail thousands of people without trials in a notoriously harsh prison.

On Saturday (January 3), Mr. Rosa will go before a judge to decide if Spain will go ahead with extradition proceedings.

Mr. Rosa has worked for prominent Salvadoran news organisations and foreign outlets like The Guardian and Spain’s El Pais newspaper, the press association said.

Mr. Bukele is wildly popular at home for his crackdown on gangs that used to terrorise the country, acting under emergency laws that allow people to be arrested without a warrant.

Human rights activists say the government is also applying this policy to critics of the president.



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El Salvador’s congress approves changes to reform constitution, a move critics call anti-democratic https://artifex.news/article68123716-ece/ Tue, 30 Apr 2024 05:41:14 +0000 https://artifex.news/article68123716-ece/ Read More “El Salvador’s congress approves changes to reform constitution, a move critics call anti-democratic” »

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El Salvador’s Congress, which is controlled by President Nayib Bukele’s New Ideas party, on April 29 approved a change to an article of the Constitution to facilitate larger constitutional reforms without having to wait until after the election of a new legislature.

The move further consolidates power in the hands of Mr. Bukele and his party, with some critics saying it opens a possible path for the leader to stay in power.

Previously, constitutional reforms had to be proposed and approved in one legislature, then ratified in the subsequent Congress following elections. Now, reforms can be swept through with just the vote of three quarters of legislators.

“This is a shot to the democracy of our country. The only thing they are demonstrating is the petty interests and ambition to maintain and not let go of power,” said Rosa Romero, of the right-wing Nationalist Republican Alliance (ARENA).

Mr. Bukele, a populist strongman, has already made moves that critics say endanger the Central American nation’s fragile democracy.

In addition to going after critics and locking up 1% of his country’s population in his gang crackdown, the leader last year also approved reforms slashing the number of seats in Congress, effectively weighing upcoming elections in his party’s favor.

In February, highly popular Mr. Bukele easily won a second term in his country’s presidential elections, despite the country’s constitution prohibiting re-election. His party also won a super majority in Congress, effectively allowing Bukele to rule as he may.

The constitutional reform would only further allow the leader to push through his policies, including potentially carrying out more reforms to stay in power.

In an interview with the Associated Press in January, Mr. Bukele’s Vice President didn’t discard the possibility of the leader seeking a third term if the constitution was changed after repeatedly dodging questions by reporters.

The April 29 reform quickly sparked outrage among critics and watchdogs, including Claudia Ortiz, a legislator under the VAMOS party who voted against the reform.

“Do they know what they are doing? They are handing themselves power. Aren’t they ashamed? I want to tell Salvadorans not to give up,” Mr. Ortiz said.

Meanwhile, Citizen Action, an non-governmental organization said in a statement on Monday that “New Ideas is eliminating another political counterweight.”

The measure they eliminated “aimed to preserve the Constitution and protect the people from abuses of temporary legislative majorities,” the statement read.



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