logo
Prominent Anti-Corruption Lawyer Is Arrested in El Salvador

Prominent Anti-Corruption Lawyer Is Arrested in El Salvador

New York Times19-05-2025

A prominent Salvadoran lawyer known for publicly accusing President Nayib Bukele's government of corruption and malfeasance was detained by the authorities on Sunday night, according to the lawyer's employer, a human rights organization.
Ruth López, who leads the organization's anti-corruption and justice unit, had not been formally charged as of Monday and her location was unknown, according to a statement from the group.
The arrest was confirmed by the country's attorney general's office, which in an online post said the 'administrative detention' of Ms. López was linked to her previous work as the 'right hand' of a magistrate and former government official, Eugenio Chicas.
Mr. Chicas, a former president of El Salvador's supreme electoral tribunal who also served as a press secretary to former President Salvador Sánchez Cerén, was arrested in February on charges of illicit enrichment.
'Ruth López collaborated in the theft of funds from state coffers,' the attorney general's office said in its post.
Ms. López's arrest prompted immediate outcry within and outside El Salvador from human rights groups and experts. They said that Mr. Bukele, emboldened by his relationship with President Trump since agreeing to imprison migrants deported from the United States, had stepped up attacks on his critics.
'For years, Ruth López has courageously exposed corruption and human rights violations in El Salvador,' Juanita Goebertus, the Americas director for Human Rights Watch, said in a statement. 'Her arrest is not an isolated incident — it marks a dangerous escalation in President Bukele's effort to silence dissent.'
Since 2022, Mr. Bukele has kept in place a state of emergency that allows authorities to carry out arrests at will, sidestepping due process.
Initially imposed to crack down on gang violence, the state of emergency has led to a dramatic reduction in crime but has also resulted at least 80,000 people being detained and placed in El Salvador's notorious prison system.
Ms. López's organization, Cristosal, has emerged as a major force in exposing abuses in the prison system and beyond. The group has repeatedly accused the Bukele administration of holding people in pretrial detention without access to lawyers or their families, in a condition that the group's director, Noah Bullock, has said amounts to forced disappearance.
Cristosal said that Ms. López had now fallen victim to that crime, which it described as 'a serious human rights violation under international law.'
Ms. López has been at the forefront of investigations into potential corruption or negligence by the Bukele government. One inquiry is related to the misuse of pandemic funds and another is tied to the contamination of the local water supply caused by the construction of the country's mega prison known as CECOT. Another denounced the use of public funds to pay for Pegasus software used to spy on journalists and human rights groups in El Salvador.
'The link with Chicas in Ruth's case is fabricated — a dubious pretext to imprison her arbitrarily,' said Napoleón Campos, a Salvadoran political analyst. Mr. Campos said the arrest should instead be viewed in the context of 'human rights abuses, the harassment of environmental defenders and the broader attack by the Bukele regime on civil society.'
This month, several journalists with the Salvadoran independent investigative news outlet El Faro fled El Salvador after learning that the government was preparing warrants for their arrests. The outlet said such a move would amount to 'the most frontal state assault on press freedom in El Salvador since Bukele came to office in 2019.'
El Faro has for years investigated the Bukele administration and its supposed negotiations with the country's gang leaders and has said its journalists were placed under surveillance and intimidated as a result.
A spokeswoman for the presidency, Wendy Ramos, did not respond questions about what grounds the government had for seeking the arrest of Ms. López or the El Faro journalists.
The Salvadoran government has consistently dismissed critiques of Mr. Bukele and his security policies as efforts by members of the political opposition to tarnish the president.
Mr. Bukele's approval ratings have consistently remained above 80 percent in public opinion surveys.
Mr. Bullock, Cristosal's director, has cast doubt on the high ratings, saying that in the face of mass arrests, the Salvadoran public has grown fearful of expressing discontent with the president and his iron-fisted approach.

Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

Trump Violated Rights of Deported Venezuelans, Judge Rules
Trump Violated Rights of Deported Venezuelans, Judge Rules

Bloomberg

time10 hours ago

  • Bloomberg

Trump Violated Rights of Deported Venezuelans, Judge Rules

A US judge ruled that the Trump administration violated the due-process rights of more than 100 Venezuelans deported to a notorious prison in El Salvador, and they must now get a chance to challenge their removal. US District Judge James Boasberg in Washington found that the purported gang members never got a chance to challenge their designation as 'alien enemies' before they were sent on March 15 and 16 to the mega-prison in El Salvador known as CECOT.

'I am a political prisoner' says detained Salvadoran activist
'I am a political prisoner' says detained Salvadoran activist

Yahoo

time10 hours ago

  • Yahoo

'I am a political prisoner' says detained Salvadoran activist

A prominent lawyer and human rights activist said Wednesday she was a "political prisoner" of El Salvador's President Nayib Bukele's government as she appeared in court accused of corruption. Ruth Lopez is a critic of gang-busting Bukele, and assists families of Venezuelan migrants deported by the United States and imprisoned in the Central American nation. "I am innocent. I am a political prisoner," the 47-year-old shouted as she was escorted by more than a dozen police after a closed-door court hearing in the capital San Salvador. "They want to accuse me because of my accusations against the corruption of this government. There is no public institution that guarantees rights," she added. Her lawyer Pedro Cruz told AFP the court had ordered her continued detention without saying for how much longer. Lopez, head of an anti-corruption unit of human rights NGO Cristosal, was arrested on May 18 and accused of embezzling state funds when she worked for an electoral court a decade ago. Her case was declared confidential by judicial authorities. Cruz called the accusation "unfounded." "They are afraid of what the accused has been working on and saying in her professional work," he told reporters before Wednesday's hearing to determine whether Lopez would remain in detention. "Under these conditions, anyone's health would suffer, but she has strength, is certain of her innocence and hopes that justice will be served," Cruz added. When she arrived for her hearing in the morning, Lopez called for a "public trial" to prove she is "innocent." "They won't silence me," she told a gaggle of gathered reporters. "The people deserve to know," she added, carrying a bible. "God and the truth are with me." A few dozen supporters gathered outside the court. - 'Dictator' Bukele - A coalition of rights groups including Amnesty International said Lopez's arrest reflected a trend of growing authoritarianism under Bukele, an ally of US President Donald Trump. Lopez has criticized Bukele's anti-crime policy, which has seen thousands of alleged gangsters arrested and jailed in harsh conditions. Bukele, who is popular among Salvadorans due to his crackdown on street gangs, has brushed off criticism about his human rights record. "I don't care if they call me a dictator. I'd rather be called a dictator than see Salvadorans killed in the streets," he said in a speech Sunday. Lopez was included in a list of 100 inspiring and influential women around the world last year by the BBC, which praised her for being "passionate about law and justice." Her NGO Cristosal helps families of Salvadorans caught up in Bukele's crackdown on gangs, as well as more than 250 Venezuelans deported by the Trump administration, which paid El Salvador to imprison them. Trump invoked rarely used wartime laws to fly the Venezuelan migrants to El Salvador in March without any court hearings, alleging they belonged to the Tren de Aragua gang, a charge that their families and lawyers deny. mis/dr/st/mlr/sla

Migrants sent to Salvadoran prison need chance to challenge removals, judge rules
Migrants sent to Salvadoran prison need chance to challenge removals, judge rules

Washington Post

time11 hours ago

  • Washington Post

Migrants sent to Salvadoran prison need chance to challenge removals, judge rules

The first Venezuelan migrants deported to El Salvador under a rarely invoked wartime law must be given the opportunity to challenge their removals even if they remain outside the United States, a federal judge ruled Wednesday. U.S. District Court Chief Judge James E. Boasberg said those 137 migrants — whom the government accused of being members of the violent Tren de Aragua gang — were 'plainly deprived' of their right to contest their removals before they were flown to a notorious Salvadoran prison under the Alien Enemies Act in March. He gave the Trump administration until June 11 to submit proposals on how it intends to allow the detainees, who remain in El Salvador, to file those legal challenges.

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

Ready to dive into the world of global news and events? Download our app today from your preferred app store and start exploring.
app-storeplay-store