Security
'Hidden' gangsters menace Salvadorans in former no-go zone
Security forces sealed off a San Salvador district amid fears of gang resurgence. Despite concerns, the government's crackdown has slashed homicide rates, fueling strong domestic support for its security strategy.
The 10 de Octubre neighborhood of San Marcos near the Salvadoran capital has been transformed in the three years since President Nayib Bukele launched a "war" on gangs that had made the Central American nation one of the most violent in the world. [Armando Acevedo/AFP]
By AFP |
SAN MARCOS, El Salvador -- Esperanza Martinez lost three relatives who were murdered and saw numerous bodies left in the streets of her neighborhood, a former stronghold of the notorious MS-13 street gang in El Salvador.
While she has lived more peacefully lately, she remains on alert: gang members are "hidden but still there," she whispered.
The 10 de Octubre neighborhood of San Marcos near the Salvadoran capital has been transformed in the three years since President Nayib Bukele launched a "war" on gangs that had made the Central American nation one of the most violent in the world.
Today, at lunchtime, buyers bustle in front of market stalls, a motorcyclist makes food deliveries and a woman sits in the back of a dilapidated pickup truck selling slushies.
![A woman walks in front of a mural at the 10 de Octubre residential neighborhood in San Marcos, El Salvador. [Marvin Recinos/AFP]](/gc4/images/2025/07/01/51012-ms13b-600_384.webp)
![Two soldiers patrol the 10 de Octubre residential neighborhood in San Marcos, El Salvador. [Marvin Recinos/AFP]](/gc4/images/2025/07/01/51013-ms13c-600_384.webp)
![Two soldiers walk in front of graffiti alluding to the ruling New Ideas party in the 10 de Octubre residential neighborhood of San Marcos, El Salvador. [Marvin Recinos/AFP]](/gc4/images/2025/07/01/51011-ms13-600_384.webp)
It is a scene that was unthinkable just a few years ago, when no intruders were tolerated in the vast areas of El Salvador controlled by Mara Salvatrucha -- commonly known as MS-13 -- and rival gang Barrio 18.
"Many people entered here and never left. I saw dead people lying there, shot or stabbed. There's a clandestine cemetery on the hill," said Martinez, who has spent 34 of her 65 years in the neighborhood.
Law-abiding residents had to lock themselves indoors at night, she recalled.
Her 12-year-old niece was murdered for refusing to become a gang member, her mother suffered the same fate for trying to defend her and her sister's husband was killed for not paying an extortion demand.
One of Martinez's three daughters emigrated at the age of 17 to escape death threats.
Murals replace graffiti
The 10 de Octubre neighborhood was once ruled by Elmer Canales Rivera, nicknamed "Hollywood Crook," one of the leaders of MS-13 who is now in the United States awaiting trial.
On the walls, "MS" or "Hollywood" graffiti has been replaced by murals of balloons, butterflies and multicolored flowers.
A giant "N" on a sky-blue background refers to both Bukele (by his first name) and his New Ideas party.
The 10 de Octubre neighborhood is one of 11 areas placed under military protection by Bukele following the March 2022 declaration of a state of emergency.
"We will flush out every last hidden terrorist," the president recently promised as his security forces surrounded a district on the outskirts of San Salvador where officials said gang members were trying to regroup.
While there is a risk of the gangs making a comeback, the show of force also reflects Bukele's desire to keep playing "an important public role," said Jose Miguel Cruz, a scholar of Salvadoran gangs at Florida International University.
Bukele, who began a second presidential term in June 2024, claims to have made El Salvador "the safest country in the world."
His harsh crackdown on criminal groups has led to a drastic drop in the homicide rate, making him popular at home.
'A little peace'
At a roundabout where buses depart, Carlos Sanchez, a 48-year-old car washer, warned: "We mustn't be careless."
"Today we have a little peace, but remnants (of gangs) are hidden in the hills," he said.
MS-13, which has been declared a terrorist organization by the United States, and Barrio 18 controlled 85% of the national territory, lived off extortion and drug trafficking and are estimated to have killed about 200,000 individuals over three decades, according to Bukele.
"One day, they stabbed a young man to death in a minibus. They wanted to kill my two daughters, too, because they refused to cooperate. Many complied for fear of reprisals. They used children as lookouts," Sanchez said.
Gangsters evicted families from their houses at gunpoint.
"They wanted to take mine, but I managed to talk them out of it," Antonia Alfaro, 67, said in her small house.
"Some are still hanging around, but I have nowhere else to go."