Thursday, August 28, 2025

El Salvador Enacts Military-Style Rules on Haircuts and More in Schools

THE NEW YORK TIMES: President Nayib Bukele says that his new education minister, a military officer, will restore discipline to schools where gangs once recruited. A school workers’ union called the appointment “absurd.”

A clean uniform. Approved haircuts only. Saying hello when entering the classroom, and goodbye when leaving it. Reciting the national prayer to the flag.

Students are now required to follow all these requirements and more in El Salvador, where the government of President Nayib Bukele said it is restoring discipline to schools and critics argued that he is pushing the country back toward its era of military rule.

Over two terms, Mr. Bukele has taken more control of life in El Salvador, cracking down on gangs and restricting rights to make his country one of the safest in Latin America — and becoming hugely popular with voters in the process. Lawmakers in his party recently ended presidential term limits, and he has dismissed accusations of government abuses as false.

But his recent decision to hand the reins of the public school system to Karla Trigueros, a military officer without experience in education, has drawn strong criticism. Teachers, along with rights groups, have raised concerns about the new education minister’s proclamation of strict, nationalistic rules for students, calling them a slide backward in a country long scarred by abuses of security forces. » | James Wagner | Reporting from Mexico City | Wednesday, August 27, 2025

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