In the 1970s, students at the University of El Salvador (UES) overwhelmingly aligned themselves with the revolutionary left as a response to the escalating repression and despotism of the military governments in power.[2] On July 19, 1972, the government of Colonel Arturo Armando Molina staged a military occupation of the main campus to suppress the student opposition, lasting until mid-1973.[3] When the UES reopened, Molina began a smear campaign against the university, labelling it a center of Marxist indoctrination.[2]
Events of July 30, 1975
On July 19, 1975, while television audiences from around the world watched the finale of the Miss Universe pageant in El Salvador,[4][2] students in Santa Ana and San Salvador protested the government expenditure of 1 million colones ($114,393.10 USD in 2023) on the beauty contest during a context of great social inequality. Heavily armed troops were dispatched to stop the demonstrations,[5][6] alleging that the protests were part of a wider Communist plot. As a result of these clashes with demonstrators, Colonel Molina's military government reported one death, five injuries and 11 arrests. However, according to students, at least 12 demonstrators were killed, along with 20 injuries and 40 arrests.[7]
In the following days, the West Campus of the University of El Salvador was raided by the National Guard and the now-defunct Treasury Police and National Police.[8] These raids included other human rights abuses committed by these same armed forces in the city of Santa Ana, the location of the West UES Campus.
To protest the repression, on July 30, 1975, around 2 p.m., a demonstration made up of UES and high school student activists left from the entrance of the School of Science and Humanities at the University's main campus in San Salvador.[4]
Around 4:30 p.m., marchers were attacked by armed forces as the protest reached the overpass in front of the General Hospital of the Salvadoran Social Security Institute (ISSS), located on N 25th Ave in the country's capital.[8] Officers threw tear gas cannisters and opened fire on demonstrators, killing several on impact. Protesters were then trapped on the overpass by tanks positioned on either side. These began running over the wounded, and forced others to jump over the sides of the overpass into the traffic below and climb over the walls of the ISS to escape the violence.[5][2][8]
The total number of losses is still undetermined,[9][10] as security forces quickly blocked off the area after the massacre and removed the bodies, washing the blood off the streets with soap and water, according to witnesses.
Aftermath
La Prensa Gráfica, one of the country's main dailies, reported seven deaths among the university students.[11] However, more conservative local newspapers reported only ten injured state forces.[6] Contemporary figures place the total number of casualties between 50 and 100.[2][9]
Those accused of ordering the student massacre were then-Salvadoran Minister of Defense and Public Safety, General Carlos Humberto Romero, who would become President of El Salvador two years later, and Colonel Arturo Armando Molina, who was president at the time. Neither faced charges in connection with the July 30 incident.[8] In 2020, a group of survivors asked the Attorney General of El Salvador to investigate a dossier of 60 human rights violations committed during the events of July 30.[5]
The July 30 Massacre radicalized El Salvador's urban leftist activists,[12] prompting the creation of the militant, student-led People's Revolutionary Bloc,[2] and of armed groups such as the Farabundo Martí Popular Liberation Forces.[8] These would go on to become key players in the country's civil war, which fully erupted in 1980, slightly less than five years after the student massacre.
^ abcdefChávez, Joaquín Mauricio (2017). Poets and prophets of the Resistance: intellectuals and the origins of El Salvador's civil war. Oxford, UK New York, NY: Oxford University Press. pp. 133–134, 149–154. ISBN978-0-19-931551-2.
^Armstrong, Robert; Shenk, Janet (1982). El Salvador: the face of revolution (2. ed.). Boston: South End Pr. ISBN978-0-89608-138-3.
^ ab"Rector contra intervención de policía en la Universidad" [Chancellor Against Police Intervention at the University]. El Diario de Hoy (in Spanish). July 31, 1975. p. 3.