In the heart of El Salvador’s war on gangs, CECOT stands as both symbol and warning. Built to contain up to 40,000 of the country’s most feared inmates, it strips life down to bare survival: metal bunks without mattresses, identical meals of rice and beans, no books, no screens, and almost no speech. The electronic dome above blocks every signal to the outside world; the concrete below offers nowhere to run, nowhere to hide. Director Belarmino García’s decision to keep the lights burning 24/7 is not a quirk of architecture but a statement of power. Under permanent illumination, there is no true night, no private corner, no escape into dreams. Inmates are counted, drilled, preached to, and locked away for 23 and a half hours a day, with the punishment cell waiting for those who resist. For a nation once drowning in bloodshed, this is presented as the necessary price of peace—yet inside those walls, the question lingers: at what cost to the human soul?
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