“We have reached the figure of 50,000 people arrested during the state of emergency regime,” said the director of the national civil police, Mauricio Arriaza. A total of 1,283 firearms and more than one million dollars were also seized.

Adopted at the end of March after a wave of violence linked to gangs which left 87 dead, the state of exception, which notably allows the police to make arrests without a warrant, has been extended month by month by the Parliament, controlled by supporters of Mr. Bukele.

In total, some 66,000 alleged members of the “maras”, the criminal gangs, the most important of which are the Mara Salvatrucha (MS-13) and Barrio 18, are currently imprisoned in El Salvador, including the 16,000 already detained before the state of exception.

To cope with this increase in the prison population, President Bukele ordered the construction of a gigantic prison with 40,000 places in the center of the country. This establishment should open at the end of the year.

The fight against crime has earned the young president, 40 years old and fond of social networks, record popularity in the country.

But NGOs like Amnesty International and Human Rights Watch have denounced arbitrary arrests and other human rights violations.