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Nayib Bukele registers to run in 2024 election

Nayib Bukele registers to run in 2024 election
Photo: @elsalvador

October 27 |

Nayib Bukele registered yesterday as candidate of Nuevas Ideas to compete for the presidency of the republic for the five-year term 2024-2029, and completes the formula Felix Ulloa for the vice-presidency.

The request for the Cian registration was received by the magistrates of the Supreme Electoral Tribunal (TSE) at the close of the legal period for political parties to present their presidential candidate formulas, totaling seven, arising from the internal elections of each institute developed according to the calendar established by the collegiate body.

“The Salvadoran people will decide if they want to continue being the safest country in the continent or the most insecure in the world”, expressed Bukele before hundreds of citizens, whom he greeted after delivering the respective documentation, accompanied by Ulloa, and urged that in the elections they will win in all the ballot boxes.

He reminded that in order to continue with the security strategy, which has been strengthened with the exception regime, three quarters of the deputies of the Legislative Assembly are needed; this will guarantee that Salvadorans do not continue paying extortion, he said.

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Bukele thanked God and Salvadorans for the victory achieved in 2019, as well as the deputies of Nuevas Ideas who have made courageous decisions in Congress, among these approving and extending the exception regime.

He highlighted the achievements already made in the areas of security and tourism, and added that “we still need to improve health, education, infrastructure, and we are going to do all that in the next five years”. He reiterated that El Salvador is willing to be a friend of the international community, but demanded respect for its sovereign decisions.

“If we achieved all that in five years, imagine what we will achieve in five more years”, Bukele expressed before the crowd that chanted his name.

After submitting the application for registration of the Cian formula, the TSE authorities have three working days to accept it.

It was on September 15, 2022 when Bukele announced in national chain that he would run as presidential candidate. “So that we can continue this path that we have started. The path that for the first time in our history has proven to be the right one,” he said.

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The political opposition has spoken out against Bukele’s candidacy for a new presidential term and obviated resolution 01- 2021 of the Constitutional Chamber of the Supreme Court of Justice (CSJ) that qualifies him to compete.

In fact, lawyers Salvador Enrique Anaya and José Marinero delivered yesterday afternoon to the TSE a document requesting that the registration be denied. Also the Nuestro Tiempo party, through its president, Andy Failer, and its presidential candidate, Luis Parada, submitted this week to the TSE the same request.

Four of the five magistrates of the Supreme Electoral Tribunal coincided in pointing out, as well as experts, analysts and constitutional lawyers, that sentence 1-2021 is legitimate and must be complied with, as has been the case with all resolutions issued by the Constitutional Chamber of the Supreme Electoral Tribunal.

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International

Trump Says Iran Is Welcome at 2026 World Cup but Warns of Security Concerns

The President of the United States, Donald Trump, said Thursday that the national football team of Iran is “welcome” to participate in the 2026 World Cup, although he suggested it might be safer for the team not to take part in the tournament.

“The Iranian national soccer team is welcome at the World Cup, but I really don’t think it’s appropriate for them to be there, for their own safety,” Trump wrote on his social media platform Truth Social.

His comments came a day after Iran’s sports minister, Ahman Donyamali, said that there are currently no conditions for the country to participate in the tournament following the killing of Iran’s Supreme Leader, Ali Khamenei, during a military offensive launched on February 28 by Israel and the United States.

“After the corrupt government killed our leader, there are no conditions that allow us to take part in the World Cup,” the Iranian official said. He added that the country has faced two wars in the past eight or nine months, resulting in thousands of civilian deaths, making participation in the tournament unlikely.

On Tuesday, the president of FIFA, Gianni Infantino, met with Trump at the White House.

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Following the meeting, Infantino said that Trump reiterated that Iran’s national team would be allowed to compete in the FIFA World Cup 2026.

“We discussed the current situation in Iran and the fact that the Iranian team has qualified to participate in the FIFA World Cup 2026. During the conversation, President Trump reiterated that the Iranian team is, of course, welcome to compete in the tournament in the United States,” Infantino wrote on Instagram.

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Central America

UN Rapporteur Warns of “Deep Crisis” in Guatemala’s Judicial System

The United Nations Special Rapporteur on the Independence of Judges and Lawyers, Margaret Satterthwaite, said Monday that Guatemala’s judicial system is facing a “deep crisis” after evaluating the country’s institutional situation.

Speaking at a press conference in Guatemala City, the UN official explained that several factors have weakened judicial independence and placed the justice system in a “critical” situation.

Among the main problems identified were the “instrumentalization of justice,” concentration of power, and persecution of judicial officials, elements that, according to Satterthwaite, undermine the functioning of the rule of law in the country.

Satterthwaite presented these conclusions while releasing her final report on the visit she carried out in May 2025, when she spent 12 days in Guatemala assessing the performance of the judicial system.

During her stay, she met with judges, prosecutors, public defenders, lawyers, lawmakers, civil society organizations, and representatives of Indigenous communities, as well as officials from the executive, judicial, and legislative branches. These meetings took place in Guatemala City and in the departments of Quetzaltenango and Alta Verapaz.

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The rapporteur also reiterated her concern about the role of the Public Ministry of Guatemala, noting that the information collected points to the existence of a policy of criminalization against justice operators.

Despite this scenario, Satterthwaite expressed confidence that Guatemala can reverse the situation, highlighting that the country’s Constitution has previously demonstrated the ability to guarantee respect for the rule of law.

She also stressed that key appointments expected in the coming months will be decisive for the future of the judicial system, including the selection of a new Constitutional Court of Guatemala, a new Supreme Electoral Tribunal of Guatemala, and a new attorney general to replace the current head of the Public Ministry, Consuelo Porras.

“The appointments scheduled for 2026 to the Constitutional Court, the Supreme Electoral Tribunal, and the Public Ministry will be decisive in determining whether the current patterns of institutional capture and impunity will be consolidated or reversed,” the rapporteur concluded.

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Central America

UN Report Warns of Nicaragua’s “Transnational” Surveillance Network Targeting Dissidents

A special panel of the United Nations accused the government of Nicaragua on Tuesday of diverting public funds to finance the repression of political opposition both inside and outside the country, including through what it described as a “transnational network” of surveillance and intelligence.

The panel presented a new report to the press on the situation in the Central American nation, which has been governed since 2007 by President Daniel Ortega and his wife and vice president Rosario Murillo.

Based on dozens of interviews and extensive documentary evidence, the report states that since 2018—the year when student protests erupted and were violently suppressed—public funds have been diverted to support repression, including money originally allocated for social assistance programs and public sanitation projects.

According to the report, a “parallel structure” was created within the ruling Sandinista National Liberation Front to channel resources toward security operations, pro-government armed groups, and party activities.

The investigation was carried out at the request of the United Nations Human Rights Council.

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Another key finding of the report concerns the existence of a surveillance and intelligence network that extends far beyond Nicaragua’s borders, allegedly used to monitor, intimidate, and target hundreds of thousands of Nicaraguans living abroad.

The report documents an intelligence structure involving the military, police, migration authorities, the telecommunications regulator TELCOR, diplomatic missions, and operators linked to the FSLN.

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