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A far-right backlash is surging in Latin America as crime fears fuel Bukele-style crackdowns

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A far-right backlash is surging in Latin America as crime fears fuel Bukele-style crackdowns
News

News

A far-right backlash is surging in Latin America as crime fears fuel Bukele-style crackdowns

2026-06-17 14:08 Last Updated At:14:20

BOGOTA, Colombia (AP) — At the start of this decade, Latin America was hurtling to the left. Progressives, seizing on public outrage over entrenched inequities exacerbated by the pandemic, swept to power in many of the region’s biggest economies, including Brazil, Chile, Colombia and Peru.

A political backlash is brewing, though. Although homicide rates have broadly declined across Latin America compared to a decade ago, spikes in some countries and a regionwide rise in other crimes, particularly extortion, have created the conditions for conservative populists to score votes by promising strong-arm tactics against crime and immigration.

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FILE - Chilean President Jose Antonio Kast arrives for a press conference at the military base "Solo de Zaldivar," near the Chacalluta border crossing, in Arica, Chile, March 16, 2026, after signing a decree to deter irregular migration along the northern border with Peru and Bolivia. (AP Photo/Esteban Felix, File)

FILE - Chilean President Jose Antonio Kast arrives for a press conference at the military base "Solo de Zaldivar," near the Chacalluta border crossing, in Arica, Chile, March 16, 2026, after signing a decree to deter irregular migration along the northern border with Peru and Bolivia. (AP Photo/Esteban Felix, File)

FILE - Migrants, mostly from Venezuela, wait to cross into Peru at the Chacalluta border crossing point in Arica, Chile, Nov. 28, 2025. (AP Photo/Ibar Silva, File)

FILE - Migrants, mostly from Venezuela, wait to cross into Peru at the Chacalluta border crossing point in Arica, Chile, Nov. 28, 2025. (AP Photo/Ibar Silva, File)

FILE - Honduran President Nasry Asfura, left, and Costa Rica President-elect Laura Fernandez shake hands during the inauguration ceremony of Chile's President Jose Antonio Kast, in Valparaiso, Chile, March 11, 2026. (AP Photo/Esteban Felix, File)

FILE - Honduran President Nasry Asfura, left, and Costa Rica President-elect Laura Fernandez shake hands during the inauguration ceremony of Chile's President Jose Antonio Kast, in Valparaiso, Chile, March 11, 2026. (AP Photo/Esteban Felix, File)

FILE - Soldiers briefly detain a youth to walk him to an area to check if he has gang-related tattoos as they patrol the south side of Quito, Ecuador, Jan. 12, 2024, in the wake of the apparent escape of a powerful gang leader from prison. (AP Photo/Dolores Ochoa, File)

FILE - Soldiers briefly detain a youth to walk him to an area to check if he has gang-related tattoos as they patrol the south side of Quito, Ecuador, Jan. 12, 2024, in the wake of the apparent escape of a powerful gang leader from prison. (AP Photo/Dolores Ochoa, File)

FILE - President Donald Trump poses for a group photo with, from left, Paraguay President Santiago Peña, Dominican Republic President Luis Abinader, Bolivia President Rodrigo Paz Pereira, El Salvador President Nayib Bukele, and Argentina President Javier Milei, at the Shield of the Americas Summit at Trump National Doral Miami in Doral, Fla., March 7, 2026. (AP Photo/Mark Schiefelbein, File)

FILE - President Donald Trump poses for a group photo with, from left, Paraguay President Santiago Peña, Dominican Republic President Luis Abinader, Bolivia President Rodrigo Paz Pereira, El Salvador President Nayib Bukele, and Argentina President Javier Milei, at the Shield of the Americas Summit at Trump National Doral Miami in Doral, Fla., March 7, 2026. (AP Photo/Mark Schiefelbein, File)

Stump speeches casting migrants as criminals and pitching heavy-handed security strategies popularized by El Salvador’s president, Nayib Bukele, have won conservative candidates U.S. President Donald Trump's backing and fired up their disaffected electorates despite concerns that such tactics could encourage human rights abuses or threaten democracy.

“You have an emergent right wing that is very much in collaboration across the region and with the U.S. through the MAGA movement, which has also used crime as a rallying cry for political mobilization,” said Enrique Roig, vice president of the nonprofit Human Rights First and a former State Department official. “It's easier to sell locking people up than it is to deal with the reasons why mainly young men join gangs in countries like El Salvador.”

Although populist politics across the political spectrum have done well, only the right has offered short-term security solutions that will make voters “feel safer in six months” even if they have to “sacrifice democracy and human rights,” said Adam Isacson, director for defense oversight at the Washington Office on Latin America organization.

Proposals offered by the left, such as community violence prevention programs, better police training, and judicial and prison reforms, take more time to bear fruit, he said.

“It’s absolutely what you’re supposed to be doing, but people’s patience runs out,” Isacson said of long-term proposals. “So, there come the Bukeles of the world saying, ‘You want to feel better? We got this.’”

In Colombia, where swaths of the countryside have fallen into renewed conflict, pro-Trump businessman Abelardo de la Espriella has topped polls ahead of Sunday's runoff election as he takes his cues from Bukele.

In Peru, where extortion has increased fivefold in the past five years, Keiko Fujimori rocketed to a June 7 presidential runoff on a law-and-order platform, vowing to deploy the military in prisons and along borders as she leans on the authoritarian legacy of her disgraced late father, former President Alberto Fujimori.

Costa Ricans, rattled by record levels of drug-related killings, elected conservative populist Laura Fernández in February for her tough-on-crime platform. Honduran businessman Nasry Asfura swept December's election after Trump endorsed him as a partner in the fight against “narco-communists.”

Latin America and the Caribbean last year saw their combined average homicide rate drop by more than 5% compared to 2024, with the median rate reaching about 17.6 per 100,000 people, according to InSight Crime, a think tank focused on organized crime in the Americas.

But there are a few key exceptions. Drug-fueled killings have increased in Peru and Colombia, the world's top cocaine producers, as well as in neighboring Ecuador, whose major ports traffickers see as a gateway to European markets.

Last year, authorities tallied 2,400 homicides in Peru and 14,780 in Colombia, which were the most in each country since at least 2020. Killings rose a remarkable 31% in Ecuador year-on-year, to 9,216.

Gangs are blamed for much of the violence that began soaring in Ecuador during the COVID-19 pandemic, as cartels from Mexico, Colombia and the Balkans expanded their operations and hired locals, who set off a deadly fight over drug-trafficking routes. Their territorial disputes include prisons, where hundreds of inmates have been killed since 2021.

Ecuadorian authorities also recorded more than 16,100 cases of extortion last year, which was down from 23,000 in 2024, though experts say it's an underreported crime.

Four years ago, Chilean voters rejected ultra-conservative lawmaker José Antonio Kast in favor of ex-President Gabriel Boric, a young, tattooed former student protest leader seeking to address Chile’s endemic social inequities. Last year, though, fears over rising crime — and its frequent association in media with the country's growing population of Venezuelan immigrants — played into Kast’s hands, returning him to power.

As Venezuelan crime syndicates like the Tren de Aragua gang seized on their country’s mass migration wave to infiltrate human trafficking networks following the pandemic, Chile, long one of Latin America's safest countries, witnessed an unprecedented explosion of carjackings, kidnappings and shoot-outs.

Chile’s homicide rate rose by 30%, to a peak of 6.7 per 100,000 people from 2021 to 2022, according to the Interior Ministry. It has since dropped but has stayed above pre-2021 levels. Other types of violent crime are still rising, including kidnappings, which have increased by nearly 180% over the past four years.

Drawing inspiration from Bukele, whose mega-prisons in El Salvador he toured while campaigning, Kast handily beat his Communist opponent in December with pledges to build a massive border wall, toughen prison conditions for gang members and deport hundreds of thousands of migrants without legal status. For his promises of safety, voters shrugged off Kast's opposition to abortion and same-sex marriage rights and his defense of Augusto Pinochet's bloody dictatorship.

In Peru, despite the contentious legacy of the convicted Alberto Fujimori, his daughter's candidacy has taken advantage of a surge in violent crime four years after she lost the election to schoolteacher Pedro Castillo.

Campaigning under the slogan “Peru with Order,” Keiko Fujimori won the largest vote share in April's first round of voting. Results of the June 7 runoff still show her in a technical tie with the political heir of the imprisoned Castillo, nationalist Roberto Sánchez.

Experts say the public's appetite for tough tactics — historically associated with the region's right-wing 20th-century dictatorships — has grown alongside its shrinking confidence in state institutions and its deepening ambivalence about democracy.

“The thinking is often, ‘democracy hasn’t been able to keep me and my family safe, so maybe democracy is part of the problem,’” said Eduardo Moncada, director of the Institute of Latin American Studies at Columbia University.

That poses a major challenge to the Latin American left, which in many countries has presided over sluggish economies, grappled with corruption scandals and failed to fulfill promises of social reform in recent years.

Even progressives such as Jeannette Jara in Chile and Sánchez in Peru have shifted with the political tide. Uruguay's president, Yamandú Orsi, called Bukele's model an example worthy of further study. The center-left Guatemalan government declared a state of emergency to crack down on gang violence this year and welcomed the Trump administration's help targeting drug traffickers.

Recently elected politicians' hard-line ambitions, though, have collided with the practicalities of governing complex and cash-strapped democracies like Ecuador and Chile. They are nothing like tiny El Salvador, where Bukele’s party holds a legislative supermajority.

Ecuadorian President Daniel Noboa's promises in his 2023 campaign included locking up gang leaders on barges and building mega-prisons. He abandoned the floating prisons proposal after taking office, and it took his government until November to open the first mega-prison.

“Building mega-prisons hasn’t been that easy or that straightforward because the country is in a very bad state financially and because President Daniel Noboa still sees himself as a democrat,” said Beatriz García Nice, policy analyst for the Washington-based Stimson Center think tank.

Nearly three months into Kast's tenure, pollsters say a skeptical public can't tell the difference between his security crackdown and that of his left-wing predecessor. His government has organized only two deportation flights after promising to immediately round up and expel Chile’s more than 300,000 immigrants without legal status. A different, more sheepish tone has crept into his speeches. Last month, he came under fire for calling the mass deportation promise “a metaphor.”

Even as he pitched new security measures in a June 1 address, including banning those convicted of attacking police from receiving social benefits, he tried to whittle down his supporters' outsize expectations.

“Governing, as many of you know, means taking responsibility for reality, especially when it’s difficult,” he said. “I’m proceeding step by step because this isn’t something that happens overnight.”

DeBre reported from Buenos Aires, Argentina.

FILE - Chilean President Jose Antonio Kast arrives for a press conference at the military base "Solo de Zaldivar," near the Chacalluta border crossing, in Arica, Chile, March 16, 2026, after signing a decree to deter irregular migration along the northern border with Peru and Bolivia. (AP Photo/Esteban Felix, File)

FILE - Chilean President Jose Antonio Kast arrives for a press conference at the military base "Solo de Zaldivar," near the Chacalluta border crossing, in Arica, Chile, March 16, 2026, after signing a decree to deter irregular migration along the northern border with Peru and Bolivia. (AP Photo/Esteban Felix, File)

FILE - Migrants, mostly from Venezuela, wait to cross into Peru at the Chacalluta border crossing point in Arica, Chile, Nov. 28, 2025. (AP Photo/Ibar Silva, File)

FILE - Migrants, mostly from Venezuela, wait to cross into Peru at the Chacalluta border crossing point in Arica, Chile, Nov. 28, 2025. (AP Photo/Ibar Silva, File)

FILE - Honduran President Nasry Asfura, left, and Costa Rica President-elect Laura Fernandez shake hands during the inauguration ceremony of Chile's President Jose Antonio Kast, in Valparaiso, Chile, March 11, 2026. (AP Photo/Esteban Felix, File)

FILE - Honduran President Nasry Asfura, left, and Costa Rica President-elect Laura Fernandez shake hands during the inauguration ceremony of Chile's President Jose Antonio Kast, in Valparaiso, Chile, March 11, 2026. (AP Photo/Esteban Felix, File)

FILE - Soldiers briefly detain a youth to walk him to an area to check if he has gang-related tattoos as they patrol the south side of Quito, Ecuador, Jan. 12, 2024, in the wake of the apparent escape of a powerful gang leader from prison. (AP Photo/Dolores Ochoa, File)

FILE - Soldiers briefly detain a youth to walk him to an area to check if he has gang-related tattoos as they patrol the south side of Quito, Ecuador, Jan. 12, 2024, in the wake of the apparent escape of a powerful gang leader from prison. (AP Photo/Dolores Ochoa, File)

FILE - President Donald Trump poses for a group photo with, from left, Paraguay President Santiago Peña, Dominican Republic President Luis Abinader, Bolivia President Rodrigo Paz Pereira, El Salvador President Nayib Bukele, and Argentina President Javier Milei, at the Shield of the Americas Summit at Trump National Doral Miami in Doral, Fla., March 7, 2026. (AP Photo/Mark Schiefelbein, File)

FILE - President Donald Trump poses for a group photo with, from left, Paraguay President Santiago Peña, Dominican Republic President Luis Abinader, Bolivia President Rodrigo Paz Pereira, El Salvador President Nayib Bukele, and Argentina President Javier Milei, at the Shield of the Americas Summit at Trump National Doral Miami in Doral, Fla., March 7, 2026. (AP Photo/Mark Schiefelbein, File)

HANGZHOU, China--(BUSINESS WIRE)--Jun 17, 2026--

Ant Group's 2025 Sustainability Report disclosed a record R&D investment of USD 5.17 billion (RMB 35.03 billion) in 2025—the fifth straight year of growth—alongside AI-powered green computing breakthroughs that contributed to cutting operational carbon emissions by 55.32% year-on-year. These milestones reflect Ant Group's commitment to sustainable AI development.

This press release features multimedia. View the full release here: https://www.businesswire.com/news/home/20260617847068/en/

“Does technological advancement necessarily lead to shared prosperity? The answer lies not in the technology itself, but in the people who use it,” wrote Eric Jing, Chairman of Ant Group, and Cyril Han, CEO of Ant Group in their joint address. “Making AI a driver for shared prosperity—this is our answer to the age of AI, and our shared commitment to the future."

Record AI Investment Drives Three Core Priorities

According to Ant Group’s 2023 and 2025 Sustainability Reports, the company has been increasing annual R&D spending since 2021. These investments cover major areas including foundational AI models, AI-powered payment & everyday services, and AI-driven health solutions.

AI Health App Bridging the Medical Resource Gap

As of February 2026, Ant Group's AI-native health app, AQ, has reached a major milestone — surpassing 100 million total users. This achievement builds on AQ’s rapidly expanding health ecosystem. By late 2025, the app had connected users with services of over 5,000 medical institutions across China, successfully driving the AI integration of 301 partner facilities.

To enhance accessible care, AQ collaborated with more than 2,000 Chinese physicians to launch “AI Doctor Agents.” These AI-powered virtual doctors are trained on the specific clinical expertise of individual specialists. The doctor agents offer free, reliable guidance for daily health questions, having served over 6.9 million users in 2025.

Next Generation AI Payment and Everyday Services

On June 16, 2026, Alipay launched a major AI agent upgrade ("Ah Bao" in Mandarin), enabling its one billion users to find services more easily and execute daily tasks with the help of its AI agent interface.

In May 2026, Alipay unveiled a full-stack AI payment infrastructure featuring consumer products AI Pay and AI Wallet, alongside business solutions including AI payment processing and Token Pay. At its foundation lies China's first Agentic Commerce Trust Protocol, developed with partners, supported by an intelligent security system that safeguards every AI-driven transaction. Together, these technologies form the trust and transaction infrastructure essential for scaling the agentic economy.

By May 2026, Alipay AI Pay surpassed 300 million transactions, establishing itself as the first commercially scaled AI-native payment infrastructure globally.

As agentic commerce gains momentum in China, Alipay’s AI payment services have expanded across diverse use cases. These include AI agents integrated into apps and mini programs for retailers like Luckin Coffee; AI-powered smart glasses from Rokid; consumer applications such as Alibaba’s Qwen; smart cockpit systems; OpenClaw-type AI agents, and AI development platforms including Coze and Qoder; AI model companies like MiniMax and Stepfun; and One Person Companies (OPCs).

Advancements in Foundation Model Research

In 2025, Ant Group open-sourced the Ling series foundational models, delivering high-performance models at lower computing costs. Its latest evolution features the release of Ling-2.6-1T, a trillion-parameter language model designed for complex, real-world tasks such as coding and multi-step workflows.

Moreover, Robbyant, Ant Group’s embodied AI company, launched the “Evolution of Embodied AI Week” initiative in January 2026 and open-sourced a full stack of AI models for the physical world. Among them is LingBot-World, a world model that achieves industry-leading performance in video quality, dynamic fidelity, long-term consistency, and interactivity.

Green Computing Breakthrough Delivers Measurable Impact

Following the principle of “achieving the same business outcomes with less computing power”, Ant Group's self-developed Theta AI infrastructure enables substantial efficiency gains through optimized model distribution and intelligent scheduling:

Clean Energy Transition Accelerates

In 2025, Ant Group achieved operational carbon neutrality for the fifth consecutive year, with Scope 1 and Scope 2 emissions cut by 55.32% compared with the baseline year of 2020. Through refined clean energy trading and allocation strategies, Ant Group increased clean energy use in its data centers to 65% in 2025.

"We believe that the true value of technology lies not in fleeting trends, but in genuine needs, steadfast commitment, and human well-being. How can technology reach everyone who truly needs it? With unwavering resilience, we will continue to use technology to bring small and beautiful changes to the world,” wrote Sabrina Peng, Chief Sustainability Officer of Ant Group.

Ant Group's 2025 Sustainability Report is available in Chinese here, an English version will be available in the coming months.

About Ant Group

Ant Group is a global digital technology provider and the operator of Alipay, a leading internet services platform in China, connecting over one billion users to more than 10,000 types of consumer services from partners. Through innovative products and solutions powered by AI, blockchain and other technologies, Ant Group supports partners across industries to thrive through digital transformation in an ecosystem for inclusive and sustainable development. For more information, visit www.antgroup.com

Progress of Ant Group's main AI initiatives

Progress of Ant Group's main AI initiatives

Ant Group has been ramping up R&D investment in AI

Ant Group has been ramping up R&D investment in AI

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