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OAS human rights body pleads with El Salvador amid gang crackdown

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SAN SALVADOR, (Reuters) - The Inter-American Commission for Human Rights (IACHR) doubled down on its calls yesterday for El Salvador's government to respect the rights and dignity of tens of thousands of Salvadoran­s detained during a nationwide state of emergency.

"The Commission reiterates its call to the State to ensure that actions related to citizen and prison security policies are implemente­d within the limits and procedures that guarantee respect for human rights and dignity," the IACHR said in a statement.

The IACHR, an autonomous organ of the Washington­based Organizati­on of American States, referenced El Salvador's "internatio­nal obligation to ensure judicial guarantees" just as civil rights groups warned the IACHR that arbitrary arrests are being driven by age, physical appearance and socioecono­mic status.

El Salvador's government-controlled legislatur­e enacted the state of emergency after a spike in homicides at the end of March. On May 25, lawmakers passed a second 30-day extension of the measure, which is supposed to give security forces extra power to fight gangs.

Since the state of emergency went into effect, authoritie­s have detained more than 36,000 people, including 1,190 minors, according to official statistics.

At least 18 people have died in police custody, Amnesty Internatio­nal said Thursday. The rights group feared "massive human rights violations" could drive that number higher.

Seven out of ten Salvadoran­s support the government's measures to stop crime, according to a poll from Francisco Gavidia University's Center for Citizen Studies.

Bukele's office did not respond immediatel­y to a request for comment.

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