El Salvador is Enforcing Strict Student Dress Codes to Bring Discipline Back to Schools

A youth gets his hair cut at a barbershop to adhere to public school rules for hair in San Salvador, El Salvador, Friday, Aug. 22, 2025. (AP Photo/Salvador Melendez)
A youth gets his hair cut at a barbershop to adhere to public school rules for hair in San Salvador, El Salvador, Friday, Aug. 22, 2025. (AP Photo/Salvador Melendez)
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El Salvador is Enforcing Strict Student Dress Codes to Bring Discipline Back to Schools

A youth gets his hair cut at a barbershop to adhere to public school rules for hair in San Salvador, El Salvador, Friday, Aug. 22, 2025. (AP Photo/Salvador Melendez)
A youth gets his hair cut at a barbershop to adhere to public school rules for hair in San Salvador, El Salvador, Friday, Aug. 22, 2025. (AP Photo/Salvador Melendez)

Principals this week in El Salvador began greeting students individually at school gates, not only to wish them “buenos días,” but also to inspect their haircuts and school uniforms.

President Nayib Bukele has expanded his efforts to remake his country to students’ appearance as part of bringing discipline back to schools, once a recruiting ground for the country’s powerful gangs, said The Associated Press.

His newly appointed education minister, Karla Trigueros, is an Army captain and physician who visits the country’s schools wearing fatigues.

She sent a memo Monday to all school principals saying not only would they be held to a high standard as role models for students, but they must stand at the gate looking for clean and neat uniforms, “appropriate” haircuts and formal greetings from students.

Failure to follow the directives would be considered a “serious lack of administrative responsibility,” Trigueros said in the memo.

The rules already existed, but weren’t enforced. The order generated lines in barbershops across the country as boys sat for neat, high and tight haircuts and many students posted videos of themselves being shorn.

Bukele is a millennial leader who leaned toward baseball caps and jeans during his first term but has taken on more formality in his second. He shared the memo on X, writing, “to build the El Salvador we dream of, it’s clear we must completely transform our educational system.”

Anecdotally, parents seemed to support the latest move by the highly popular president too.

“I feel like it’s good, that’s how you straighten them out from a young age,” mother María Barrera said Thursday as she watched her son enter the Concha Viuda de Escalon school.

“I didn’t know, but my son came clean, though a little hairy,” said María Segovia, who takes her son to school on her way to work. “I took him to the barber today. We’re going to comply because it’s good.”

Parent Ramon Valladares alluded to the powerful gangs that ruled neighborhoods and recruited school kids for years before Bukele’s crackdown that has imprisoned more than 88,000 people suspected of gang ties. In those days, teachers feared imposing discipline on students who might have gang connections.

“Now that the government is putting things in order, maybe people might not like it, right?” Valladares said. “But there are some families like ours who are open-minded about any situation. So for me, it’s great.”

One student who was pulled out of line and identified himself only as Juan said they got him for not having a school insignia on his shirt pocket.

“I promised to bring it tomorrow,” he said. “I thought it wasn’t so serious and I put on another shirt.”

Vicky Alvarado, principal at the Francisco Menéndez Nation Institute, said “the students always gets in, their entrance is never prohibited, what we do is call attention so they comply.”

Bukele’s administration recently alleged the gangs were trying to reestablish themselves through schools. In June, more than 40 students were arrested at three public schools in the capital, San Salvador.

One of the country’s teachers’ unions said it supported the new guidance, but believed it was necessary to adjust laws protecting children that made it difficult to impose school discipline.

“Many teachers, in a desire to achieve order and discipline in schools, were reported and many were punished,” said Paz Zetino Gutiérrez, secretary of the El Salvador Public School Teachers Union.

Attempts to regulate hairstyles in US school districts have caused a furor. Some were criticized for disproportionately affecting students of color and attempting to deny cultural and religious identities.

Human rights lawyer Jayme Magaña criticized the instructions, however, saying the requirements in the Trigueros memo could create hardships for families with limited resources.

“If moms can’t pay the barbershop, if their homes don’t have (running) water, (or) electricity to iron, if they haven’t given them shoes, put yourself in that position Minister (Trigueros), and dress like a civilian,” Magaña wrote on X.

Bukele trolled those he called “haters” in a post on X late Thursday, saying critics accuse Trigueros of repressing students above a video of girls asking her for her autograph.



Qassim Falcons Festival Concludes with Record Attendance

Photo by SPA
Photo by SPA
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Qassim Falcons Festival Concludes with Record Attendance

Photo by SPA
Photo by SPA

The Qassim Falcons Festival concluded yesterday in Al-Asyah Governorate, with 675 falconers from various Arab countries and over 20,000 visitors and 15 local families attending, contributing to the festival’s economic and social activities, SPA reported.

This edition of the festival featured numerous competitions and programs that attracted falconry enthusiasts and reinforced its status as one of the region’s premier heritage events.


Ethiopia Must Suspend Biggest Gold Mine over Toxic Chemicals

Mine workers stand underground at Gold Fields' South Deep mine, south-west of Johannesburg, South Africa October 12, 2022. REUTERS/Siphiwe Sibeko/File Photo
Mine workers stand underground at Gold Fields' South Deep mine, south-west of Johannesburg, South Africa October 12, 2022. REUTERS/Siphiwe Sibeko/File Photo
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Ethiopia Must Suspend Biggest Gold Mine over Toxic Chemicals

Mine workers stand underground at Gold Fields' South Deep mine, south-west of Johannesburg, South Africa October 12, 2022. REUTERS/Siphiwe Sibeko/File Photo
Mine workers stand underground at Gold Fields' South Deep mine, south-west of Johannesburg, South Africa October 12, 2022. REUTERS/Siphiwe Sibeko/File Photo

Work at Ethiopia's largest gold mine must be suspended to protect nearby children from the toxic chemicals it has released into the soil, Human Rights Watch (HRW) said Thursday.

Operations at the Lega Dembi mine, around 500 kilometres (310 miles) south of the capital Addis Ababa, were halted by authorities in 2018 following protests from locals over pollution.

The government promised to reopen the mine only after environmental concerns had been addressed, but did so in 2021 "without public announcement" and "quashed publication of a government health study", said HRW in a statement.

The rights group said several studies had revealed high concentrations of toxic chemicals including cadmium, mercury, lead and arsenic.

Residents had "for years complained about serious health impacts, including children born with long-term health conditions, miscarriages, and stillbirths".

The campaign group urged the UN Committee on the Rights of the Child, due to meet soon, to press Ethiopia to suspend mining operations and "ensure victims of abuse are provided effective remedy, including compensation, medical care, and access to justice".

The Ethiopian government did not respond to a request for comment from AFP.

Ethiopia, the continent's second most populous country with some 130 million inhabitants, is regularly criticised by NGOs for human rights abuses.

But mining is crucial to a country in which more than 40 percent live below the poverty line, with gold exports generating $2.1 billion in the first nine months of 2024, according to the latest figures from the mining ministry.


ADHD in Childhood Can Increase the Risk of Physical Health Problems Later in Life

Symptoms of ADHD include excessive activity (Reuters)
Symptoms of ADHD include excessive activity (Reuters)
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ADHD in Childhood Can Increase the Risk of Physical Health Problems Later in Life

Symptoms of ADHD include excessive activity (Reuters)
Symptoms of ADHD include excessive activity (Reuters)

Having ADHD in childhood could increase the risk of physical health problems such as migraines, back problems, cancer, epilepsy and diabetes later in life.

That’s according to a study led by University College London (UCL) and University of Liverpool researchers that found people with ADHD traits at age 10 were more likely to have other physical health conditions by age 46, The Independent reported.

Around 3 million people in the UK have ADHD, a condition which impacts how people focus their attention. Individuals with ADHD can have high energy and an ability to focus intensely on what interests them, but they may find it difficult to focus on mundane tasks.

This can lead to more impulsiveness, restlessness, and differences in planning and time management, which may make it harder to succeed at school and work. Experts also now believe it could be increasing physical health problems later in life.

The authors of a new study have suggested poorer health outcomes can be partly explained by increased mental health problems, higher BMI and higher smoking rates among people with ADHD.
According to The Independent,

Professor Joshua Stott at UCL said: “All of these potential explanatory factors align with the fact that ADHD makes impulse control more difficult, the need for instant gratification and reward more intense, and is also associated with worse mental health in part due to the social disadvantage people with ADHD face.”

The study published in the journal JAMA Network Open analysed data from 10,930 participants of the UCL-led 1970 British Cohort Study.

ADHD traits were determined based on child behaviour questionnaires completed by parents and teachers when the study participants were 10 years old, regardless of whether they had ever been diagnosed with ADHD.

The researchers found that people with high scores on the index of ADHD traits at age 10 were more likely to have other health conditions by age 46, with 14 per cent higher odds of reporting two or more physical health problems such as migraine, back problems, cancer, epilepsy or diabetes.

Among those with high ADHD traits in childhood, 42 per cent had two or more health problems in midlife, compared to 37 per cent of those without high ADHD traits.

A study published last year by the same research group also found an apparent reduction in life expectancy for adults with diagnosed ADHD, although this was not part of the current study.

Lead author Dr Amber John, who began the research at UCL before moving to the University of Liverpool, said: “It’s important to note that people with ADHD are a diverse group, with a range of different strengths and experiences, and most will lead long, healthy lives.

“However, many face significant barriers to timely diagnosis and appropriate support. This is important because providing the right support for and meeting the needs of people with ADHD can help to improve their physical and mental health outcomes.”