-
Myanmar says massive 11,000-carat ruby discovered in Mandalay
-
Singer Bonnie Tyler in induced coma in Portugal
-
More than 3,000 attacks on Ukraine healthcare since start of war: WHO
-
Gulf clash threatens hopes for quick US-Iran deal
-
'They looked like me': Why Arsenal became Africa's club
-
South Koreans gear up to roar on football team from rival North
-
Taiwan welcomes Paraguay leader as China ramps up pressure
-
Stocks fall as US-Iran clashes spark peace talks fears
-
Japan confirms year's first fatal bear attack, two more suspected
-
Indonesia volcanic eruption kills three hikers: officials
-
Caged and fed 'cookies': Rescuing Armenia's captive bears
-
Japan baseball mulls punishments for dangerous swings after umpire hit
-
Copa Libertadores match in Colombia abandoned after crowd trouble
-
Toyota sees profit drop as US tariffs, Mideast bite
-
Child deaths mount from Bangladesh measles outbreak
-
Eurovision: how it works
-
Former China Eastern boss charged with bribery
-
Thunder top LeBron and Lakers, Pistons down Cavs
-
Wobbling Wolfsburg face uphill battle against Bayern
-
History-chasing Barca eye title party in Liga Clasico
-
Inside the jails where Russia breaks Ukraine prisoners 'like dogs'
-
Oil jumps, stocks fall as US-Iran clashes spark peace talks fears
-
Malaysia plans cloud seeding for drought-hit 'rice bowl'
-
Where are the flash points in next week's Trump-Xi talks?
-
'No medicine for my son': Sudanese struggle to survive in new war zone
-
North Korea to deploy new artillery along border with South
-
EU monitor says sea temperatures near all-time highs as El Nino looms
-
Pistons hold off Cavs to take 2-0 NBA series lead
-
Leo marks one year as pope in Pompeii, Naples
-
In big man US football league, guys score a different kind of goal
-
Trump heads for Xi summit overshadowed by Iran war
-
New York governor orders US immigration agents to unmask
-
Arsenal sense Premier League glory as Spurs eye safety
-
Pitch for World Cup final installed at US stadium
-
IS-linked Australian women charged with keeping slave in Syria
-
Venezuela admits death of political prisoner in custody nearly one year later
-
Lee leads by one at LPGA Mizuho Americas Open
-
Hot-putting McCarty seizes PGA lead at Quail Hollow
-
CPJ demands progress on US probe of journalist Abu Akleh killing, four years on
-
'Elitist' World Cup leaves Mexican soccer family on sidelines
-
Palace overcome Shakhtar to reach historic Conference League final
-
Watkins salutes Emery after Villa reach Europa final
-
AI actors not eligible for Golden Globes, say organizers
-
Kuebler brace sends Freiburg past Braga into Europa League final
-
Rayo down Strasbourg in Conference League to set up first European final
-
Villa crush Forest to reach Europa League final against Freiburg
-
Brazil's Lula and Trump hail positive talks after rocky relations
-
Shakira teases new World Cup song
-
Palace beat Shakhtar to reach first European final
-
Rail fare to World Cup final stadium is cut ... to $105
'Silent crisis': the generation of Salvadorans deprived of a dad
Jade comes home from school each day to feed the chickens at her home in the Central American nation of El Salvador with her classmates' taunts ringing in her ears.
Her father is one of 91,000 people, mostly young men, rounded up by iron-fisted President Nayib Bukele and thrown in prison since 2022 under a state of emergency imposed to fight violent gangs.
"It hurts me when they say he's some kind of gang member," the slight teenager told AFP, referring to the schoolyard jibes.
"My dad is innocent," she insisted.
Bukele's crackdown has left thousands of children without one or both parents, plunging many into poverty even as relatives step in to try and meet their needs.
After Jose Urquia's arrest in August 2023, 16-year-old Jade (not her real name) and her 13-year-old brother were placed in the custody of their grandmother, Sara Rivas.
They survive on remittances from their mother, who lives in the United States, and the income from Rivas's small farm in El Rosario, some 50 kilometers (31 miles) east of the capital San Salvador.
- 'My childhood was taken' -
Twins Carmen and Manuel (not their real names) are also growing up without their father, a 36-year-old bread delivery man with no criminal record who was arrested in June 2022.
"It's horrible because he didn't choose to leave us, he was taken from our arms," Carmen, 17, told AFP in an interview at their home in Zacatecoluca, about 60 km from San Salvador.
The twins have had to work to help the family survive.
Carmen cleans homes with her mother and washes pets while Manuel works on construction sites.
"I have had to grow up too fast; my childhood was taken from me," said Carmen, who graduated from high school with honors.
She was confident she will be reunited with her father one day.
But some children have already been orphaned.
Between 2022 and 2024, nearly 180 minors lost a parent who died behind bars, according to regional human rights group Cristosal.
- Tattoos -
Bukele's anti-gang crackdown has turned what was once one of Latin America's most deadly countries into one of its safest for most of its people.
But NGOs say security has come at the cost of a total disregard for the rights of both detainees and their children.
According to Cristosal, some 62,000 children under 15 may have suffered some form of neglect due to the mass arrests.
Urquia, 37, was detained after being deported from the United States, where he was living illegally.
His family believes he was labeled a gang member despite having no criminal record because he has the names of his children and wife, as well as his own name, tattooed on his chest and hands.
Tattoos are widely viewed as a sign of gang allegiance in El Salvador.
Cristosal and other NGOs have denounced the arbitrary nature of the arrests as well as numerous accounts of torture and mistreatment in custody.
In Bukele's sprawling Terrorism Confinement Center (CECOT), which right-wing leaders across Latin America have vowed to copy, inmates are barred from receiving visits from lawyers or family and are only allowed to leave their crowded cells for 30 minutes a day.
The government says it has released around 8,000 people so far for lack of evidence against them, and is planning mass trials for those who remain.
Some children separated from their father or mother, or both, drop out of school to work, according to Cristosal, drawing attention to what it calls a "silent crisis."
The "impact will be seen in the decades to come," the group has warned.
Jade said she plans to change schools to escape the bullying.
The National Council for the Protection of Children and Adolescents (CONAPINA) assured AFP it was providing "psychological and emotional" support for prisoners' children and helping families caring for them to start their own business.
CONAPINA argued that, in some cases, the incarcerated parents were the ones "primarily responsible for the violation of their children's rights."
P.Serra--PC