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From the New York Times, I'm Sabrina Tavernisi, and this is the daily El Salvador has experienced a remarkable transformation.
What had been one of the most violent countries in the world has become incredibly safe today.
My colleague Natalie Kitroev on the cost of that transformation to the people of El Salvador and the man at the center of it, President Naib Bukele, who claimed victory in an election on Sunday.
It's Wednesday, February 7.
So, Natalie, you've spent the past few months reporting on El Salvador.
Tell us what you've been finding in your reporting.
Yeah, so I've been really interested in El Salvador since I became the bureau chief in Mexico City.
I mean, this is this tiny country, the smallest country in Central America, that now has this broad resonance across the region because it has undergone a remarkable transformation in the last few years.
Now, to really understand the magnitude of this change of what's happened, you have to remember that El Salvador was long known as one of the world's most violent countries.
Government troops in El Salvador.
Nowhere in the world today is there a fiercer, bloodier battle for control of a nation.
This is violence that traces itself back to this bloody civil war that the country fought that ended in 1992.
It sent hundreds of thousands of Salvadorans fleeing to the United States, where they develop these street gangs.
In El Salvador, they fight against each other.