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Tuesday, May 06, 2025
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El Salvador president orders arrest of of bus company heads for defying free transport order

publish time

06/05/2025

publish time

06/05/2025

El Salvador president orders arrest of of bus company heads for defying free transport order
El Salvador’s President Nayib Bukele listens during a meeting with President Donald Trump in the Oval Office of the White House in Washington on April 14. (AP)

SAN SALVADOR, El Salvador, May 6, (AP): El Salvador President Nayib Bukele ordered police via social media on Monday to arrest five heads of bus companies in the Central American country after they defied his order to offer free transport for a week following a major highway closure. The order was another example of Bukele's heavy-handed tactics.

The second-term leader has been accused of undermining democratic institutions, punishing dissenters and denying access to due process under a "state of emergency” that he declared in 2022 to battle the country's powerful street gangs. Despite the crackdown, the government has denied the country is a police state.

On Sunday, Bukele had announced via X that all bus fares for a week would be completely free due to construction the government was carrying out on one of the main highways running through San Salvador. The order resulted in widespread chaos on Monday, fueling long bus lines in the Salvadoran capital and overcrowded buses that skipped stops on a number of routes.

In response, Bukele ordered the capture of five heads of bus companies Monday, accusing them of "sabotaging the country.” He claimed that the government was covering "100% of the income they normally receive per day,” but The Associated Press was not immediately able to verify the information with bus drivers.

"The National Civil Police should proceed with the arrest of the owners of the routes involved,” Bukele wrote on a social media post. "No one is above the law.” Later Monday, the country's federal police department posted photos of the handcuffed men surrounded by heavily armed officers, saying they had been detained for "breach of duty, denial of assistance, and extortion,” providing few details on their arrests.

The National Transportation Committee, which represents the companies involved, said in a statement that they were surprised by the arrests. They blamed confusion on some routes on the fact that the free rides had been announced just a day earlier and they weren’t able to notify everyone.