
Advocacy organizations focused on human rights are sounding the alarm about the troubling circumstances facing Salvadorans who have been sent back from the United States to their home country.
According to these groups, individuals who are deported from America frequently vanish into El Salvador’s correctional facilities immediately upon their return or within days of arriving back in the Central American nation. Numerous deportees lose all contact with their relatives and legal representatives for extended periods, sometimes lasting several years.
The situation has been exacerbated by policies implemented by Salvadoran President Nayib Bukele over the past four years. Bukele has continuously renewed emergency measures that suspend constitutional rights for 30-day periods, essentially establishing a police state environment that traps returning deportees within the country’s prison system, which has gained notoriety for harsh conditions.
These emergency powers have created a cycle where deportees find themselves unable to communicate with the outside world once they enter El Salvador’s correctional facilities, leaving families in the United States and elsewhere without information about their loved ones’ whereabouts or wellbeing.








