El Salvador Paves the Path for Mass Trials as Government Intensifies Crackdown on Gangs

El Salvador Paves the Path for Mass Trials as Government Intensifies Crackdown on Gangs

Nayib Bukele’s​ government has already locked up 2% of El Salvador’s adult population ⁢and built the largest prison in the Americas to house the 70,000 alleged gang members he ⁤has imprisoned.

Now the populist leader has cleared the way for mass trials of hundreds of people at a time as he steps ⁣up his year-long crackdown on the country’s gangs which critics ‍say is⁢ eroding the rule of law ‍and leading to many⁢ innocent people ⁣being wrongly jailed.

El ‌Salvador’s congress ​passed a bill on Wednesday that could allow up to 900 people to be tried simultaneously⁤ if they come⁢ from the same region or are accused of belonging to the same criminal group.

The legislation also increases prison​ time ⁣for those found to‍ be gang
leaders from 45 years to 60.

A state of emergency declared in March 2022 means the right to trial ‌is increasingly disregarded in the Central American‌ country and the list of people held⁢ for months awaiting ​trial​ is growing quickly.

‘It’s a war ​on the people’:‍ El Salvador’s mass arrests send‍ thousands into despairRead ⁣more

The latest blow could leave El ‌Salvador’s‍ justice system⁤ as little ⁣more than a facade, human rights groups said.

“All human beings deserve the opportunity to defend themselves in court. How ‍can they‌ do this ⁢effectively in⁢ group trials?​ How can lawyers and public defenders do their work this way?”​ said Carolina Jiménez Sandoval, president of the Washington Office​ on Latin America (Wola).

Bukele’s New Ideas ‍party said the measure ⁤would help bring‍ more order to the country⁢ as it seeks to stamp ‌out its violent armed gangs. Congress approved ⁤the ⁢bill with 67 votes in​ favour and six against.

Bukele’s ‌harsh approach ⁣to criminality has won the millennial leader the strongest approval ratings in Latin America and a cult following with politicians across the region who emulate his casual looks and hardline security policies to⁣ win⁣ over ‌voters.

But critics say that the 42-year-old is ⁤sweeping aside democratic ​checks and balances.

More than‌ 70,000 alleged gang members have been ⁢put‌ behind bars in the last​ 16 months and⁣ the crackdown is ⁢increasingly ⁤indiscriminate.

A growing number of ⁤innocent foreign visitors are finding themselves in overcrowded Salvadoran jails after ⁤being‌ rounded up by troops for having tattoos and being in poor neighbourhoods.

“These reports are becoming ‌more common by the day from⁣ Human Rights organisations, people who have managed to leave jail and families‌ denouncing arbitrary arrests,” said Ruth Elonaro López, a lawyer‍ at ⁤Cristosal,⁣ a Salvadoran human rights group. “The problem is the ​state ⁢of emergency means there no longer needs to be evidence to ⁢detain or​ jail someone for long periods of time. People ⁤are being rounded up because⁣ they seem nervous, they have forgotten their documents or they are simply young.”

There appears to be no ‍long-term plan for the‌ one ⁢in 50 adults now imprisoned in dangerously ‌overcrowded and unsanitary conditions.

The‍ most notorious of El Salvador’s criminal…

2023-07-27⁢ 10:07:30
Article from www.theguardian.com
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