El Salvador and its “marathon” of arrests: Justice or legal limbo?
If you thought that the exception regime in El Salvador was just a temporary measure, get ready for the sequel: “Two more years… and counting”. Congress, with that bureaucratic efficiency that only appears when something controversial must be approved, gave the green light to extend the arrests of 88,750 people (yes, you read correctly) while the Prosecutor’s Office plays “detective in slow motion”. Reason? “More complete investigations,” says prosecutor Rodolfo Delgado. Translation: “We need another 24 months… and maybe 12 extra, just in case.”.
The numbers that no one wants to see (but should)
With 57 votes in favor (and three dissidents who are probably already on the list of “traitors to the country”), the reforms will allow judicial processes to be grouped by “cliques” (gangs) or “courts” (territories). In other words, justice in bulk, like shopping at Costco but with sentences. Of course, 90% of those detained remain without a final sentence, and more than 8,000 were released because, surprise, they had no criminal ties. Calculation error or “collateral damage” of the heavy hand?
Deputy Claudia Ortiz (VAMOS) summed it up with the sarcasm that we all think: “They have had two years to investigate and now they ask for more… What did they spend their time on, on memes?”. Meanwhile, the Bukele government continues to sell the narrative of “anti-gang hero”, although the figures say that justice advances at a snail’s pace.
Bonus track: And the minors?
For teenage gang members, things are not looking better: the Juvenile Penal Law now contemplates up to 20 years in prison for those over 16 and 10 years from the age of 12. Because nothing says “happy childhood” like a cell shared with ringleaders. Of course, gang leaders could accumulate 60 years… although, with the life expectancy in prison, it may be a post-mortem sentence.
Moral: In El Salvador, the exception regime seems to have become the “default mode”. And while some celebrate the drop in homicide rates, others ask: At what cost? And what happens when the rule of law becomes a “state of permanent suspension”?
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