El Salvador Detains 17,000 'Suspected Gang Members' Without Due Process
President Nayib Bukele extends “state of emergency” for El Salvador—allowing the police to continue to mass arrest people for little, if any, reason.

After a wave of murders left 89 people dead in one weekend, the president of El Salvador, Nayib Bukele, initiated a nationwide crackdown to target the gangs he claims are responsible. Declaring a "state of emergency," he asked the legislative branch to grant police exceptional powers for 30 days, allowing them to surveil or arrest anyone they choose without a warrant or due process. The state of emergency orders were set to expire at the end of April, but today they were extended for an additional 30 days.
In raids performed immediately after the Salvadoran Congress' approved the state of emergency on March 27, police officers executed warrantless arrests of thousands, most of whom were denied the right to an attorney and due process. United Nations investigators have raised alarms over the detentions. Family members of many of the people arrested never received an explanation for why they were detained and have reported being unable to reach them or obtain information on their cases.
The state of emergency has also denied civil rights to anyone else arrested for any crime at all— detainees face weeks in notoriously overcrowded prisons without legal counsel or charges. A 21-year-old musician died in a Salvadoran prison after being arrested without charges. His family alleges he was beaten to death, but the government refuses to perform an autopsy or open an investigation.
According to Bukele, police have arrested more than 17,000 "suspected gang members"— an astonishing number for a country with a population of just 6.5 million.
Though human rights organizations and journalists in El Salvador have strongly criticized what they describe as a "disturbingly authoritarian suspension of civil rights," Bukele is doubling down. A law passed by Congress in April that prohibits the publication of "any gang communication" punishes journalists who report on any gang activities with up to 15 years in prison.
Furthermore, reports from Human Rights Watch (HRW) and Salvadoran journalists suggest that police may be arresting suspects arbitrarily, especially in poor neighborhoods, to inflate numbers. Bukele denies this, insisting that the measures are necessary and that those arrested are "terrorists" and "gang members."
This latest crackdown comes after years of accusations by international media and the U.S. government that Bukele agreed to a power-sharing deal with gangs when he took office in 2020.
"The administration has created a narrative of propaganda about the gangs," Juan Martinez, founder of the Salvadoran newspaper El Faro, tells Reason. "In this narrative, Bukele's authoritarian measures over the years were necessary to fight corruption, and the gangs were nearly defeated. But this narrative just isn't true."
Martinez says that the truce Bukele had in place with gangs has fallen apart and the government is now desperately trying to build a new narrative by demonstrating how they are "tough on crime."
"We were attacked because we showed the truth," says Martinez, who fled the country after the president accused him of being affiliated with the gangs the government claims to be fighting. He says he has faced death threats and that journalists in El Salvador understand the risks that come with criticizing the government. "We are all nervous. My family fears for their lives. My colleagues are under attack."
Juan Pappier, chief investigator for the Americas at Human Rights Watch, says his organization has also been threatened by Bukele, who accuses them of supporting" the gangs and has mockingly called them "Homeboys Rights Watch."
"Attacking the messenger instead of responding to the accusations is a classic reaction by authoritarian leaders such as Nayib Bukele," Pappier tells Reason.
This isn't the first time Bukele has been called an autocrat. Last year, he replaced the entire Constitutional Court with loyalists. He's also used the police to target his critics and opposition.
Pappier thinks Bukele has gone too far, "The government is very clearly trying to intimidate those who criticize them." For now, Bukele's policies remain very popular with his base, who support a "tough on crime" approach, but the young president may find it hard to maintain support as he embraces an increasingly vindictive populism.
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El Salvador Detains 17,000 'Suspected Gang Members' Without Due Process
Thank god that sort of thing doesn't happen here in the good ol' US of A.
I have no idea what you’re talking about.
—Reason
Were they wearing MAGA hats?
Exactly, the Biden* administration is holding political prisoners in Washington DC with no due process.
Maybe this author could write about that.
I got curious about this line: "After a wave of murders left 89 people dead in one weekend"
That appears to be about 33x more than the number of per capita murders in an average 2 day period in the US. That's pretty nuts to think about. I think I did my math right...
To be clear, I don't actually agree with this. I don't know enough of the details, but due process matters a lot and is an important part of creating a society in the long term that is functional. I really was just curious to see how many people 89 murders was in one weekend vs a baseline I'm familiar with.
According to the cdc , over 24,000 homicides per year in the us
Around 3,200 per year for El Salvador
3200/52 = 61.5 per weekend, so yeah, 89 is almost a 50% jump.
Apparently there are 6.5 million people in El Salvador, so 89 in one weekend is pretty damn high
That's the population of my state and between KC and St. Louis, we rarely have more than 10 per weekend
due process matters a lot
Ignoring due process both ways: 89 people shot *in one weekend* is between half and 90% of the people shot in Chicago in any given *year* in the last couple decades.
Vast emergency powers for 30 days; who else has done this just recently? Why pick on El Salvador [and not on Justin Castreau}?
Por que no? Funciono para Canada!
El Salvador Detains 17,000 'Suspected Gang Members'
6 gang members, 16,994 undercover Salvadoran agents.
Of which 16,000 are also probably actual gang members
Just call them insurrectionists and Reason will immediately delete this article
You know who else has abused emergency powers that have gone on, unchecked for two years?
Two weeks to flatten the gangs.
Obviously the real solution is for them to all to immigrate to the U.S. Where they definitely won't join gangs or use welfare and instead will all work as gardeners and nannies for rich white women.
17,000 migrants and none that can start the Venezuelan-American version of SpaceX or build their own Venezuelan-American food truck empire from the ground up?
Racist.
So let me get this straight: crime in El Salvador is so bad that we have to open our borders to 'asylum seekers,' but when El Salvador tries to do something about said crime, we complain?
I'm waiting for the author of this piece to do a story about due process for American Citizens rotting in Washington DC jails.