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The Earth Remembers: Uncovering El Salvador’s Hidden Atrocity Infrastructure

Beneath the heat-sealed walls of El Salvador’s Centro de Confinamiento del Terrorismo (CECOT) mega-prison lies something the government—and its international enablers—never expected to be seen: the Earth itself, crying out.
I have compiled and analyzed layers of satellite imagery, infrared scans, moisture indexes, elevation profiles, and ground discoloration overlays across the terrain surrounding the Terrorism Confinement Center (CECOT). What emerged was a picture not only of a high-tech detention facility, but of a carefully concealed system of mass disappearance and disposal.
CECOT was inaugurated in February 2023 with space for 40,000 detainees, constructed in secret and under a veil of international praise for its “efficiency”. But what lies beyond the compound walls tells another story.
Trenches, Runoff, and Earth Scars
Infrared and NDVI imagery show clear patterns: darkened courtyards scorched with heat signatures, unnatural trench lines extending southward, and saturated ground zones matching the profile of decomposition runoff. Moisture mapping confirms that these areas retain biological fluid—far more than surrounding terrain.
Elevation models reveal that CECOT was strategically built on a mild slope. Drainage flows from prisoner yards and central blocks funnel directly into two runoff paths, terminating at a pair of nondescript structures. These same regions show consistent vegetation die-off and repeated disruption.
When we look at CECOT from space using special satellite tools, we don’t just see buildings—we see wounds in the ground.
Infrared and NDVI imagery let us detect things the human eye can’t—like heat patterns and plant health. These tools show:
- Courtyards that are unnaturally hot, scorched from intense exposure—possibly from large gatherings, forced kneeling, or burning.
- Trench-shaped scars in the earth, carved into the ground south of the prison.
- Patches of land that stay wet and won’t grow back. That moisture? It behaves like fluid runoff from decomposition.

Another tool—elevation mapping—shows the prison was built on a slight slope. This means anything spilled, leaked, or dumped (like blood, chemicals, or bodily fluids) naturally flows downhill into two specific areas.
And in those two zones, we find:
- Dead vegetation
- Repeated land disturbance
- And the two small collection pools seem to sit right where this runoff ends
Put simply: the ground around this prison is reacting like it’s absorbing death.
It doesn’t lie.
It doesn’t forget.
It tells us where the bodies were likely taken—and where they were never meant to be found.

Testimony from the Shadows
Human Rights Watch has confirmed at least 190 deaths in custody since the start of El Salvador’s “state of exception.” Amnesty International reports that families receive sealed coffins, often with visible signs of torture, and are told not to open them.
In July 2024, HRW submitted a report to the United Nations detailing widespread arbitrary detentions, child disappearances, and confirmed torture inside CECOT. In March 2025, HRW filed a declaration in U.S. federal court stating that returning people to El Salvador—particularly to CECOT—constitutes refoulement, or the forced return to torture.
CECOT itself was constructed through contracts awarded to Salvadoran firms OMNI, DISA, and the Mexican company Contratista General de América Latina S.A. de C.V. While the full list of subcontractors has not been made public, local reporting indicates that a single business group received nearly half of all tenders related to CECOT’s construction. These contracts—collectively estimated at over $115 million—were issued without independent human rights oversight or environmental review.
Yet the U.S. continues to fund Salvadoran security through the Central America Regional Security Initiative (CARSI), and military contractors have proposed using CECOT to hold U.S. deportees. Among them is Erik Prince, founder of the controversial private military company Blackwater, who along with other security consultants has floated proposals to detain U.S. deportees in El Salvador using CECOT as a proxy detention site.
A System Built to Hide
CECOT is sealed from journalists and human rights observers. There are no visitor logs. No legal access. The state admits it can arrest anyone it wants. Inside, what happens is hidden from view. There are no independent monitors, no humanitarian inspections, and no legal advocates allowed past the perimeter. Detainees disappear into silence—some never return, and many who do are broken beyond recognition.
But the terrain is less obedient.
Each satellite pass, each spectral layer, tells the same story: the prisoner yard blackens, runoff flows, and the trenches deepen. Moisture lingers where it shouldn’t. Vegetation refuses to grow where it once thrived. What official reports suppress, the Earth makes visible. Through the unblinking eye of satellite surveillance, the ground has become the last surviving witness.
The Earth Remembers
This investigation is not the end. It is the beginning of accountability. The data will be archived. The coordinates will be mapped. And the silence will be broken.
Because the Earth remembers what the state tries to forget.
And now, so do we.
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