The mayors of the districts of Lima, Pedro Spadaro (The farm and Hernan Sifuentes (San Martín de Porres) traveled to El Salvador to learn more about the “Bukele Map”which belongs to the president of this country, Nayib Bukele. However, according to information from the Julienne style; the transfer, the daily allowances and the stay were financed respectively by the municipal budget and the other by a survey company.
They publish a norm that prohibits demonstrations in the historic center of Lima indefinitely
The measure aims to protect representative buildings such as the Government Palace, the Municipal Palace, the Mayor, San Martín, Bolívar, 2 de Mayo and Ramón Castilla squares, the Congress of the Republic, among others.
For its part, the company CIT Peru obtained a “totally free grant” for mayor Sifuentes. When asked to fund it, Representative José Saavedra replied that these were programs that had been running for 15 years.
“No, no, it’s a Latin American show, which has nothing to do with the subject of the investigations that I carry out. It’s a program that’s been going on for 15 years,” he said.
Also, in the question that, if they seek to implement the same style of the Central American country, he mentioned that they are “different realities”; in this case, it is a question of sharing “experiences”, he assured.
“Arriving in El Salvador, while I was talking with Mayor Spadaro, we stayed small, small, seeing the great experiences you worked on,” said the mayor of San Martín de Porres.
In the case of Mayor Spadaro, his expenses were covered by the management of the municipal budget after his trip was approved. Likewise, another of the invited burgomasters was that of Breña, Luis Felipe De La Mata Martinez, who did not attend “for personal reasons”.
“El Salvador today is an example for the world and for us Peruvians and, in addition, the chalacos,” Spadaro said.
This plan has been questioned by various international organizations due to cases of rape, abuse and death. However, President Bukele did not take these complaints seriously.
“I don’t care what the international organizations say, let them come and take the gang members, if they want them we’ll hand them all over,” he told the Los Angeles Times ahead of his high-handed plan. against gangs.
Rafael López Aliaga, when he was a candidate for mayor, announced that his plan to fight crime was the same as that of the Salvadoran president. This type of strategy would help eradicate crime in the country, he assured in one of the debates.
“Captured woolly, lattice woolly. In El Salvador, there has been no crime for 70 days,” he said at the time.
In addition, he assured that they were in “contact” with President Bukele’s security team, with the aim of “setting up something similar” in the metropolis of Lima.