El Salvador prosecutors search prisons in ‘president’s pact’ investigation
PROSECUTORS in El Salvador said they searched two prisons to probe whether the administration of President Nayib Bukele had negotiated with one of the country’s most powerful gangs to lower the murder rate and win their support in mid-term elections in exchange for prison privileges.
The prosecutors’ office said agents searched two prisons where gang members are held to look for documents or other evidence of the allegations. The searches were carried out at prisons in Zacatecoluca and Izalco. Attorney-General Raúl Melara said “we are not going to allow anyone to negotiate with terrorists”, adding “that is not acceptable from any perspective”.
Melara’s office is independent of the presidency. The allegation is highly sensitive in the Central American nation, where the gangs have terrorised people with extortion and killings for years. Multiple former officials from previous administrations are being prosecuted for allegedly participating in a similar deal with the gangs.
The allegations were reported on Friday by the online media outlet El Faro, which said it had obtained a cache of government documents, including prison logs and prison intelligence reports, that show government officials have held ongoing negotiations with the MS-13 gang since June last year.
Bukele has strongly denied the allegations. But if true, they would be a severe blow to Bukele who campaigned as a law-and-order president and has sought to reinforce that image through tough talk and actions while in office.
In April, after several days of street violence in which more than 60 people were killed, Bukele ordered that members of rival gangs be mixed within cells, had sheet metal installed to seal cells so inmates couldn’t communicate with those outside and circulated photographs of dozens of gang members stripped to underpants and forced to sit straddling each other on the floor.
“Stop killing immediately or you and your homeboys will be the ones who pay the consequences,” he said in a tweet at the time. “They are close to you, to your homes, to your hideouts, you have a few hours.”
Bukele referred to those actions on Friday to suggest the allegations that he was negotiating with a gang were absurd, even linking to statements of concern about his harsh actions from the UN and Inter-American Commission on Human Rights. He said his critics had “invented a novel” with the story after exhausting other attacks against him.