The Borneo Post

Honduras under state of emergency over gang activity

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TEGUCIGALP­A: Police stepped up their presence on the streets of Honduras Friday after President Xiomara Castro declared a state of emergency to quash a rise in gang activity in the Central American nation.

The small country has long been plagued by poverty, gangs, and violence linked to drug traffickin­g. Gangs have recently been extorting ordinary citizens as they go about their business.

“To strengthen efforts to recover lawless areas in the neighborho­ods, in villages, in department­s, I declare a national state of emergency,” said Castro on Thursday.

An AFP photograph­er reported a heavy presence of special forces and other officers in the capital on Friday.

Police spokesman Mario Fu told AFP that first arrests were made Friday, with four suspected gang members detained across the country.

The state of emergency comes just days after hundreds of bus and taxi drivers protested in the capital Tegucigalp­a to demand the government take steps to stop gangs from extorting a “war tax” from them. Castro, elected the country’s first woman president in January, declared “war on extortion, just as we declared war on corruption, impunity, and drug traffickin­g.”

She urged the police to recover public spaces “assaulted and controlled by organized crime and its gangs.”

She asked police to identify hotspots where “the partial suspension of constituti­onal guarantees” would be necessary.

Police chief Gustavo Sanchez said he would dedicate more money and at least 20,000 officers to the efforts to stamp out gang activity.

Along with neighbors El Salvador and Guatemala, Honduras forms the so-called “triangle of death” plagued by the murderous gangs called “maras” that control drug traffickin­g and organized crime.

In 2020, there were 37.6 recorded homicides per 100,000 inhabitant­s.

 ?? — AFP photo ?? Handout picture released by Honduras’ national Police of the arrest of an alleged coordinato­r of the Mara Salvatruch­a MS-13, in an at-risk neighbourh­ood in San Pedro Sula, Honduras after military and police operations were intensifie­d.
— AFP photo Handout picture released by Honduras’ national Police of the arrest of an alleged coordinato­r of the Mara Salvatruch­a MS-13, in an at-risk neighbourh­ood in San Pedro Sula, Honduras after military and police operations were intensifie­d.

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