Home World Facing threats, leading human rights group exits El Salvador

Facing threats, leading human rights group exits El Salvador

Executive director of the NGO Cristosal, Noah Bullock (C) speaks next to director of research Rene Valiente (L), Abraham Abrego (2nd R), director of the strategic litigation and Guatemalan lawyer Rafael Cruz (R) during a press conference in Guatemala City on July 17, 2025.

Executive director of the NGO Cristosal, Noah Bullock (C) speaks next to director of research Rene Valiente (L), Abraham Abrego (2nd R), director of the strategic litigation and Guatemalan lawyer Rafael Cruz (R) during a press conference in Guatemala City on July 17, 2025. JOHAN ORDONEZ/AFP hide caption

toggle caption

JOHAN ORDONEZ/AFP

PANAMA CITY, Panama —El Salvador has lost one more human rights group. The country’s most prominent human rights group, Cristosal, announced on Thursday that it’s being forced to shut down its operations in the Central American country.

The group was founded by Evangelical bishops to address human rights and democratic concerns after the country’s civil war. But after 25 years documenting abuses in the country, the organization says escalating threats from the government of President Nayib Bukele – a key Trump administration ally – have made it unsafe for them to operate inside El Salvador. It will now continue its work in exile in neighboring Guatemala and Honduras.

Sponsor Message

The organization accuses Bukele’s government of legal and administrative harassment, espionage, monitoring of their activities as well as defamation campaigns.

Speaking at a press conference in Guatemala on Thursday, the group’s executive director, Noah Bullock said “the clear targeting of our organization has made us choose between exile or prison. The Bukele administration has unleashed a wave of repression over the past few months.”

A spokesperson for Bukele did not immediately respond to NPR’s request for comment.

The group’s decision to suspend its operations in El Salvador comes less than three months after the arrest and imprisonment of human rights activist Ruth López, who leads Cristosal’s anti-corruption and justice program. Bullock said her arrest had been a “breaking point” for the organization.

López and the organization have been outspoken critics of Bukele’s heavy-handed tactics, including the mass incarceration of suspected gang members under a sweeping state of emergency imposed in 2022.

Cristosal’s departure comes amid a recent exodus of Salvadoran journalists and human rights activists. The journalist group, Asociación de Periodistas de El Salvador, estimates that at least 40 journalists have been forced to leave the country.

Bukele, who was re-elected last year, claims that the crackdown has made the country much safer, and while it has led to a dramatic reduction in crime, critics say it has also led to the detention of over 85,000 mainly young men and widespread human rights violations.

Sponsor Message

The president has repeatedly dismissed Cristosal as a foreign-funded political organization. In May, his government passed a “foreign agents” law allowing the authorities to monitor and tax non-governmental organizations (NGO’s) with international backing — a move widely seen as targeting critics and echoing crackdowns in China, Russia, Belarus, Venezuela, and Nicaragua.

Bukele, the self-described “worlds coolest dictator”, has become one of Trump’s most staunch defenders in the region and the two governments have been cultivating increasingly close ties. Earlier this year, Trump deported hundreds of mainly Venezuelan migrants from the U.S., claiming they were gang members, to El Salvador—where they were sent to Bukele’s notorious mega-prison, the Terrorism Confinement Center, or CECOT.

LEAVE A REPLY

Please enter your comment!
Please enter your name here

Must Read

10 Americans are freed by Venezuela in a prisoner swap for migrants in El Salvador

A Venezuelan migrant who was jailed in El Salvador gestures as he gets off a plane at Simon Bolívar International Airport in Maiquetía, Venezuela on Friday. El Salvador freed scores of Venezuelans deported from the United States to a notorious maximum security prison, the outcome of a highly coordinated prisoner swap between Caracas and Washington.

The Downstream Effects of China’s Rare Earth Mining

Enlarge this image Bundit Pantarakon stands along the Sai river in Mai Sai, where the Thai Army is building flood control barriers along the river that forms the border between Thailand and Myanmar. Michael Sullivan for NPR hide caption toggle caption Michael Sullivan for NPR Bundit Pantarakon stands along the Sai river in Mai Sai

Here are some of the newest UNESCO World Heritage sites

Orango National Park on the Bijagós Archipelago off of the coast of Guinea-Bissau is a newly designated World Heritage Site. Hellio & van Ingen/IBAP/UNESCO Nomination File hide caption toggle caption Hellio & van Ingen/IBAP/UNESCO Nomination File Twenty-six sites have been added to UNESCO's World Heritage List, designating their cultural and natural importance. Locations this year

Syrian forces who fought Druze militias leave Sweida province under a ceasefire

Israeli soldiers stand guard as Syrian Druze people cross back into Syria at the Israeli-Syrian border, in the Israeli-controlled Golan Heights town of Majdal Shams, on Thursday. Leo Correa/AP hide caption toggle caption Leo Correa/AP DAMASCUS, Syria — Syrian government forces had largely pulled out of the southern province of Sweida on Thursday after days

Facing threats, leading human rights group exits El Salvador

Executive director of the NGO Cristosal, Noah Bullock (C) speaks next to director of research Rene Valiente (L), Abraham Abrego (2nd R), director of the strategic litigation and Guatemalan lawyer Rafael Cruz (R) during a press conference in Guatemala City on July 17, 2025. JOHAN ORDONEZ/AFP hide caption toggle caption JOHAN ORDONEZ/AFP PANAMA CITY, Panama