SAN SALVADOR, El Salvador — A five-concert ''residency'' by singer-songwriter and superstar Shakira in El Salvador's capital builds on President Nayib Bukele 's yearslong effort to remake the Central American country's international image from one of the world's most violent countries into one of the safest.
The sold-out shows in the country's National Stadium Jorge ''El Magico'' González this week follow international surfing tournaments and the Miss Universe competition two years ago. El Salvador has seen big name performers in recent years, but like Bad Bunny in 2022 and Karol G in 2024, they typically play one concert and move on.
Shakira initially scheduled three dates of her ''Las Mujeres Ya No Lloran World Tour'' in El Salvador, but when the tickets went fast, Bukele wrote on X: ''El Salvador is changing and Central America too. Shakira sold out all the tickets for her 3 dates in less than 24 hours. I know the enormous effort the producers are making to extend this impressive Central American residency, based in our country.''
The Colombian singer replied almost immediately: ''Thank you, El Salvador and Central America. We're going with two more dates!''
Gang crackdown
What Salvadorans and many of the tens of thousands of foreigners who the organizers say bought tickets attribute the spectacle to is the country's security turnaround.
That has been achieved with a crackdown on criminal gangs under a state of emergency that is nearly four years old, under which some constitutional rights like access to a lawyer are suspended. The extraordinary powers have enabled the government to lock up more than 91,000 people often without due process. Hundreds have died in prison without being convicted of a crime.
The measures have been criticized by human rights organizations in El Salvador and abroad, but the success against El Salvador's gangs has won praise from Salvadorans and admiration from neighboring countries struggling to control gang violence.