Costa Rica emultes Salvador police state model
Laura Fernández, a 39-year-old political scientist and right-wing populist, will be Costa Rica's next president. Fernández secured nearly 50% of the vote in last week's election, becoming the first candidate in more than a decade to clear the threshold needed to win outright in the first round. She did so by promising to respond forcefully to the country's exaggerated yet real insecurity crisis linked to the drug trade—the overwhelming concern for most voters. On the campaign trail, Fernández drew openly from the playbook of Salvadoran President Nayib Bukele, whose brutal anti-gang crackdown has inspired conservatives across the region. She called for a "state of exception" to combat crime, promised to complete the construction of a massive Bukele-inspired prison, and spoke with Bukele before any other foreign leader after her win. Her party, the ruling Sovereign People's Party, won a majority of congressional seats but fell short of the supermajority necessary to guarantee the constitutional or judicial reforms she promised on the campaign trail. (NACLA Update)














Recent Updates
1 hour 8 min ago
2 days 56 min ago
2 days 17 hours ago
3 days 10 min ago
3 days 13 min ago
3 days 17 min ago
3 days 20 min ago
3 days 34 min ago
3 days 40 min ago
3 days 44 min ago