No department looks safe
We all know that El Salvador finished the year with a homicide rate that surpassed 100 per 100,000 Salvadorans. However, it is a country, a small one but a country nonetheless, so I was wondering about the distribution of homicides throughout the country. Unfortunately, while there are some municipalities, such as Berlin, where residents have been able to hold off growing insecurity, those efforts do not show up at the department level.
No department looks safe. Even the safe departments of Chalatenango (45.6) and Morazan (55.5) have homicide rates four and five times those considered epidemic. Cuscatlan comes in at 166.
When it comes to El Salvador, there doesn't appear to be an argument that people can simply relocate to a safer part of the country (let alone find a job there). The US will have a difficult time saying that it will only receive refugees who've fled from X and Y departments and not the rest. Of course, there remain municipalities void of large-scale violence. However, the safer, more humane course of action, seems to be to extend refugee, humanitarian, or temporary protected status to those Salvadorans who've left their homes for the relative safety of the US.
I don't know how long such protection will be required but we'll cross that road when we get to it.
When it comes to El Salvador, there doesn't appear to be an argument that people can simply relocate to a safer part of the country (let alone find a job there). The US will have a difficult time saying that it will only receive refugees who've fled from X and Y departments and not the rest. Of course, there remain municipalities void of large-scale violence. However, the safer, more humane course of action, seems to be to extend refugee, humanitarian, or temporary protected status to those Salvadorans who've left their homes for the relative safety of the US.
I don't know how long such protection will be required but we'll cross that road when we get to it.
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