GA / EL SALVADOR BUKELE
19-Sep-2023
00:01:45
In his remarks to the General Assembly’s General Debate, the President of El Salvador, Nayib Bukele, said, “in a very short time,” El Salvador went from being “the most dangerous place in the planet to being the safest country in Latin America.” UNIFEED
Subject to the Terms of Usages of UNifeed, UNifeed materials are available free of charge for news purposes only. UNifeed materials may not be sold or redistributed to third parties without the prior written consent of the UN or the UN entity which is source of the UNifeed material. All users of UNifeed materials must provide due credit to the United Nations or any UN entity source(s) in their use and broadcast of UNifeed materials.
Size
Format
Acquire
DESCRIPTION
STORY: GA / EL SALVADOR BUKELE
TRT: 01:45
SOURCE: UNIFEED
RESTRICTIONS: NONE
LANGUAGE: SPANISH / NATS
DATELINE: 19 SEPTEMBER 2023, NEW YORK CITY
TRT: 01:45
SOURCE: UNIFEED
RESTRICTIONS: NONE
LANGUAGE: SPANISH / NATS
DATELINE: 19 SEPTEMBER 2023, NEW YORK CITY
SHOTLIST
1. Wide shot, exterior, UNGA sign outside United Nations Headquarters
2. Wide shot, El Salvador President Nayib Bukele walks up to rostrum
3. Med shot, El Salvador delegation
4. SOUNDBITE (Spanish) Nayib Bukele, President, El Salvador:
"We do not accept the destiny that others had drawn for us. Today, four years into our mandate, no one dares to even deny that for the first time in our 202-year history, the smallest country on our continent has taken its first big steps towards achieving its dreams of greatness. In a very short time, El Salvador went from being the world capital for homicides – it went literally from being the most dangerous place in the planet to being the safest country in Latin America.”
5. Wide shot, Bukele at the rostrum
6. SOUNDBITE (Spanish) Nayib Bukele, President, El Salvador:
"For decades we followed everything we were told was the best for us. We fought a civil over a cause that was foreign to us, as they transported the conflict between the West and the Soviet Union to our homeland. Over 85,000 deaths later and a country that was destroyed, after all that, we were told that that was no longer the recipe. That now, there was a new recipe. So, they made sing a set of fake peace accords, that were not peaceful at all, and all they did was to divide the loot among the two sides in the war.”
7. Wide shot, Bukele at the rostrum
8. Med shot, El Salvador delegation applauding
9. Wide shot, Bukele walks away
2. Wide shot, El Salvador President Nayib Bukele walks up to rostrum
3. Med shot, El Salvador delegation
4. SOUNDBITE (Spanish) Nayib Bukele, President, El Salvador:
"We do not accept the destiny that others had drawn for us. Today, four years into our mandate, no one dares to even deny that for the first time in our 202-year history, the smallest country on our continent has taken its first big steps towards achieving its dreams of greatness. In a very short time, El Salvador went from being the world capital for homicides – it went literally from being the most dangerous place in the planet to being the safest country in Latin America.”
5. Wide shot, Bukele at the rostrum
6. SOUNDBITE (Spanish) Nayib Bukele, President, El Salvador:
"For decades we followed everything we were told was the best for us. We fought a civil over a cause that was foreign to us, as they transported the conflict between the West and the Soviet Union to our homeland. Over 85,000 deaths later and a country that was destroyed, after all that, we were told that that was no longer the recipe. That now, there was a new recipe. So, they made sing a set of fake peace accords, that were not peaceful at all, and all they did was to divide the loot among the two sides in the war.”
7. Wide shot, Bukele at the rostrum
8. Med shot, El Salvador delegation applauding
9. Wide shot, Bukele walks away
STORYLINE
In his remarks to the General Assembly’s General Debate, the President of El Salvador, Nayib Bukele, today (19 Sep) said, “in a very short time,” El Salvador went from being “the most dangerous place in the planet to being the safest country in Latin America.”
Bukele said, “four years into our mandate, no one dares to even deny that for the first time in our 202-year history, the smallest country in our continent has taken its first big steps towards achieving its dreams of greatness.”
He said, “for decades we followed everything we were told was the best for us. We fought a civil over a cause that was foreign to us, as they transported the conflict between the West and the Soviet Union to our homeland. Over 85,000 deaths later and a country that was destroyed, after all that, we were told that that was no longer the recipe. That now, there was a new recipe. So, they made sing a set of fake peace accords, that were not peaceful at all, and all they did was to divide the loot among the two sides in the war.”
The United Nations Observer Mission in El Salvador (ONUSAL) was established in July 1991 to verify implementation of all agreements between the Government of El Salvador and the Frente Farabundo Marti para la Liberación Nacional, including a ceasefire and related measures, reform and reduction of the armed forces, creation of a new police force, reform of the judicial and electoral systems, human rights, land tenure and other economic and social issues.
Bukele said, “four years into our mandate, no one dares to even deny that for the first time in our 202-year history, the smallest country in our continent has taken its first big steps towards achieving its dreams of greatness.”
He said, “for decades we followed everything we were told was the best for us. We fought a civil over a cause that was foreign to us, as they transported the conflict between the West and the Soviet Union to our homeland. Over 85,000 deaths later and a country that was destroyed, after all that, we were told that that was no longer the recipe. That now, there was a new recipe. So, they made sing a set of fake peace accords, that were not peaceful at all, and all they did was to divide the loot among the two sides in the war.”
The United Nations Observer Mission in El Salvador (ONUSAL) was established in July 1991 to verify implementation of all agreements between the Government of El Salvador and the Frente Farabundo Marti para la Liberación Nacional, including a ceasefire and related measures, reform and reduction of the armed forces, creation of a new police force, reform of the judicial and electoral systems, human rights, land tenure and other economic and social issues.
Category
Topical Subjects
Personal Subjects
Geographic Subjects
Corporate Subjects
Source
Alternate Title
unifeed230919t
Parent ID
3089875