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Prison sentences hiked for gang members

Published:Friday | April 1, 2022 | 12:10 AM
Soldiers man a checkpoint at the entrance to the Las Palmas community, a neighbourhood that is supposed to be under the control of the Barrio 18 Gang in San Salvador, El Salvador, on Sunday.
Soldiers man a checkpoint at the entrance to the Las Palmas community, a neighbourhood that is supposed to be under the control of the Barrio 18 Gang in San Salvador, El Salvador, on Sunday.

SAN SALVADOR (AP):

El Salvador’s Congress on Wednesday increased sentences for crimes committed by gang members, expanding on a state of emergency lawmakers granted last weekend as President Nayib Bukele pursues the country’s powerful street gangs.

Justice and Public Security Minister Gustavo Villatoro said that now simply belonging to a gang would bring “an exemplary sentence”.

The changes to El Salvador’s penal code, which had been requested by Bukele, passed with votes from 76 of the 84 lawmakers.

The vote came the day after El Salvador experienced its first day without a killing since imposing a state of emergency following a rash of gang violence last weekend.

The National Civil Police said Wednesday that no one had been killed in the country Tuesday, though they later reported that two suspected gang members were killed early Wednesday by security forces.

On Saturday alone 62 people were killed. That led Bukele to request congressional approval for a state of emergency that suspended some constitutional rights. The move has faced criticism from human rights organisations in El Salvador and abroad that warn the suspension of fundamental rights could open the door to human rights abuses.

In the first four days of the state of emergency, security forces arrested 2,163 suspected gang members, according to Bukele.

The measures approved by the Congress Sunday included restricting freedom to associate, the right of someone being informed of their rights when arrested and access to a lawyer. The government also extended to 15 days from 72 hours the time that someone can be held without charges and allowed authorities to intercept suspects’ communications without a judge’s approval.