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Press Freedom Group In El Salvador Moves Into Exile Amid Mounting Pressure
(MENAFN- The Rio Times) El Salvador's main journalists' association has shuttered its offices and moved its legal registration abroad, saying an increasingly hostile environment has made domestic operations untenable.
The Journalists' Association of El Salvador (APES), founded in 1936, said it would continue working from outside the country after months of escalating pressure on independent media and civil society.
The breaking point, APES says, was the Foreign Agents Law, which requires any group receiving funds from abroad to register as a“foreign agent,” pay a 30% levy on foreign-sourced income, and accept wide discretionary oversight by the state.
The association argues the measure is designed less for transparency than control, forcing newsrooms and nonprofits to choose between financial strangulation or self-censorship.
APES also points to operational barriers, including a prolonged failure by authorities to renew the group's credentials despite complete paperwork.
The association's latest monitoring shows a sharp deterioration in the media climate: 789 attacks against journalists and outlets were recorded in 2024, the highest since APES began systematic tracking.
Press Exodus Signals Shrinking Media Freedom in El Salvador
This year has brought a new wave of departures from the profession and the country itself, with 43 journalists going into exile between March and June, many after learning of supposed arrest lists circulating in the spring.
Broader rights concerns have intensified under the continuing state of exception, introduced to combat gangs but increasingly applied to critics, lawyers, and activists.
Prominent human-rights organization Cristosal suspended in-country operations and relocated staff after the arrest of one of its legal heads, highlighting the chilling effect on watchdog groups.
International press monitors reflect the shift: El Salvador ranks 135th of 180 in the 2025 World Press Freedom Index. Why this matters is straightforward. When a national press guild must leave to keep functioning, citizens lose a key line of defense against corruption, abuse, and disinformation.
Fewer independent reporters on the ground means fewer verified stories about security, public services, and the economy-issues that shape daily life and investment decisions.
For a young democracy, the choice is stark: a plural, scrutinizing media space that supports accountability, or a narrower one where fear determines what the public is allowed to know.
The Journalists' Association of El Salvador (APES), founded in 1936, said it would continue working from outside the country after months of escalating pressure on independent media and civil society.
The breaking point, APES says, was the Foreign Agents Law, which requires any group receiving funds from abroad to register as a“foreign agent,” pay a 30% levy on foreign-sourced income, and accept wide discretionary oversight by the state.
The association argues the measure is designed less for transparency than control, forcing newsrooms and nonprofits to choose between financial strangulation or self-censorship.
APES also points to operational barriers, including a prolonged failure by authorities to renew the group's credentials despite complete paperwork.
The association's latest monitoring shows a sharp deterioration in the media climate: 789 attacks against journalists and outlets were recorded in 2024, the highest since APES began systematic tracking.
Press Exodus Signals Shrinking Media Freedom in El Salvador
This year has brought a new wave of departures from the profession and the country itself, with 43 journalists going into exile between March and June, many after learning of supposed arrest lists circulating in the spring.
Broader rights concerns have intensified under the continuing state of exception, introduced to combat gangs but increasingly applied to critics, lawyers, and activists.
Prominent human-rights organization Cristosal suspended in-country operations and relocated staff after the arrest of one of its legal heads, highlighting the chilling effect on watchdog groups.
International press monitors reflect the shift: El Salvador ranks 135th of 180 in the 2025 World Press Freedom Index. Why this matters is straightforward. When a national press guild must leave to keep functioning, citizens lose a key line of defense against corruption, abuse, and disinformation.
Fewer independent reporters on the ground means fewer verified stories about security, public services, and the economy-issues that shape daily life and investment decisions.
For a young democracy, the choice is stark: a plural, scrutinizing media space that supports accountability, or a narrower one where fear determines what the public is allowed to know.

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