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El Salvador extends pretrial detention for 80,000 gang suspects 2 more years

Independenta day ago
El Salvador's Congress voted Friday to give government prosecutors two more years to hold the more than 80,000 people swept up under the state of emergency while they investigate alleged ties to the country's gangs.
The Congress, controlled by President Nayib Bukele's New Ideas party and its allies, voted 57 to 3 in favor of extending the period of pretrial incarceration.
Attorney General Rodolfo Delgado said that with the extension authorities could carry out more complete investigations, present solid evidence and win sentences against members of organized crime.
Lawmakers also gave the government the option of extending for another 12 months if necessary.
Improved public safety under the state of emergency has swelled Bukele's popularity, but the suspension of some constitutional rights and general lack of due process has drawn criticism within and outside El Salvador.
Opposition lawmaker Claudia Ortiz of the VAMOS party, said Friday it showed the government's 'inability to deliver justice.'
'They've had more than two years to do a serious investigation of all of the cases and be able to take all of those detained to trial, and since they haven't done it on time, the (National) Assembly has to do a favor for the Attorney General's Office,' she said.
Following an outburst of gang violence in March 2022, Bukele asked lawmakers for extraordinary powers to respond to a gang massacre. Among the rights the Congress agreed to suspend were the maximum time period take a prisoner before a judge, as well as fundamental protections like access to a lawyer.
Since then, more than 88,000 people have been arrested for alleged ties to gangs, with 90% still awaiting trial.
In July 2023, the Congress voted to give the government 24 months to prosecute a group of gang members. That period is up this month on Aug. 25.
Delgado said the plan is to carry out hundreds of mass trials as they've been able to sort the accused into groups.
'This big quantity of people isn't going to be judged in one or two weeks,' Delgado said. 'It takes a considerable amount of time for the judges to receive the evidence that links each one of them and then later issue verdicts according to each corresponding law.'
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Drugged, stalked & ambushed in gas attacks – the dark crime wave terrorising Brits in holiday hotspot & how to stay safe
Drugged, stalked & ambushed in gas attacks – the dark crime wave terrorising Brits in holiday hotspot & how to stay safe

The Sun

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  • The Sun

Drugged, stalked & ambushed in gas attacks – the dark crime wave terrorising Brits in holiday hotspot & how to stay safe

BURGLARS leering at naked women, tourists spiked in crowded bars and even getting tailed by thugs in supermarket car parks - this is the dark side of sunny Spain the holiday brochures won't tell you about. As thousands flock to the nation and its sandy islands this summer, Brits have been warned to be on "high alert" by cops as criminal gangs up the ante with a terrifying new toolbox of tricks, ranging from sinister gas attacks to conniving pickpocketing swindles. 12 Across the Costa del Sol and Costa Blanca, crime rates have soared so drastically that horrified expats are even taking matters into their own hands, setting up a new political party to lead the fightback against the gangs. The shocking spree has come into sharp focus in recent months after high-profile celebrities like Nick Grimshaw and Jacqueline Jossa saw thousands of pounds worth of valuables snatched from their villas. But ordinary holidaymakers are being targeted too, with traumatised Brits telling The Sun how they were attacked in their home, left hallucinating after being drugged, and robbed of over £15,000 on their way to the airport. One particularly chilling attack in Marbella was caught on camera last month, showing burglars flashing a torch on a woman as she slept naked before stealing 300 euros. It was a scene all too familiar to Newcastle mum Gill, who tells us how she was robbed and brutally assaulted in Alicante's Playa Flamenca complex in July. The 59-year-old said she heard a knock on the door of her holiday home at 2pm and, thinking it was her neighbour who had left just moments earlier, opened it. Gill said: 'There were two lads standing there, and one said 'Michael?', pretending they were looking for someone. "As I was about to speak, he grabbed me by the throat and pushed me into the house and on to the floor. 'Then they started going for my gold, grabbing the two chains on my neck, which have sovereigns on them. 'I was trying to kick and hit them, and I was screaming at the top of my lungs, then they grabbed my arm and stamped on it and kicked me repeatedly in my side.' Brit expat Priscilla Cromie, a member of a new political party demanding police do more to keep tourists safe, says crime rates have soared in recent years in resorts such as the Costa del Sol and Costa Blanca. The National Police in Alicante told The Sun how criminals often "take advantage" of busy crowds and drunk holidaymakers during the peak season. The head of the force's communications department warned that a 300 per cent swell in populations of resorts such as Benidorm and Alicante over the summer brings a huge spike in all types of crime. Over the weekend that Gill was targeted in her home, two men in similar clothing were filmed breaking into a villa in the same neighbourhood. Footage shows the masked intruders scaling the fence before checking out the property to see if there were tourists or homeowners inside. There's a big change towards tourists, we're prey and easy pickings, and honestly I don't think the police cared Donna DunneBrit holidaymaker Gill, who is still recovering from a double lung transplant last year, said she is completely "shook up" by her ordeal. She had to be taken to hospital and treated for a dislocated elbow and is now wearing a sling. The mum claimed the intruders were wearing black T-shirts and tracksuit bottoms. 'I'm always scared they are going to come back,' she added. "I've had this house for 13 years, and I have never felt unsafe." Gill said the police seemed "uninterested" and told her the garden gate should have been locked as a security precaution. 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Their spokesman said: "On the beaches, there are more pickpockets, who take advantage of large crowds to steal phones or wallets left in bags by people's towels. 'In Benidorm in particular, there are gangs dedicated to pickpocketing tourists using the 'hugging' method, in which they approach targets and pretend they know them, distracting them so they or their partners in crime can pickpocket them.' He added: 'Do not carry expensive items with you and don't walk around with large amounts of cash. 'Be extra vigilant if someone you do not know approaches you. 'Never leave wallets, phones or valuable items on a table or bar, and avoid wearing expensive necklaces or watches.' However, he said the type of crime targeting tourists was different to the Costa del Sol, which has more burglaries and home invasions. 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It is the low-level, local gangs who are targeting tourists and wealthy properties in resorts like Marbella, Benahavis and Benalmadena. 12 Brit holidaymaker Nicola Lord told The Sun her husband was spiked during their holiday to Benalmadena seven weeks ago. The seaside town is around 30 minutes by car from Marbella and has a huge British expat community, and welcomes thousands of UK tourists each year. 'He was drugged in a bar in the 24-hour square,' she claimed. "He went missing in Benalmadena for six hours, he had no clue who I was when I found him, and the police had been searching everywhere for him.' Nicola said she found him at around 6am and that he was hallucinating. 'I just want to make other holidaymakers aware,' she said, after branding the experience "heartbreaking". In a Facebook forum for Benalmadena in June, Tessa Jukes warned that a friend of hers was also drugged and robbed. She wrote: "Just to make people aware, a chap I have known for years went to 24-hour square last weekend, was drugged, robbed of €8,000 (taken from his bank cards). "Bit more to it than that, but regardless, these things do happen out there. Stay safe if you go around the area, police were informed." In May, influencer Vanessa Mariposa revealed she was taken to hospital after being spiked with date rape drugs and robbed at a rooftop party in Mallorca. The 32-year-old Austrian told her 800,000 followers she and her friend had three glasses of wine when 'suddenly, we both felt really, really bad, and I immediately realised something was wrong with me. 'Both of us started feeling extremely unwell, out of nowhere. ''I couldn't walk properly, I threw up multiple times and I completely blacked out - I lost all memory of the night. That's when I knew something was really wrong. 'I really thought I was going to die.' While she was 'drugged' she claims her Cartier bracelet was stolen along with her phone's SIM card. She believes the spikers may have had more sinister intentions, but were thwarted because her partner Luca was nearby and came to her aid. £15k airport raid Meanwhile, gangs are also targeting tourists travelling between the French and Spanish border. Donna Dunne, 45, has been travelling between Barcelona, Salou and Marseille in France for more than ten years. Her van was broken into this month in broad daylight in a popular mobile park just north of the Spanish border. Donna told The Sun she believes she may have been followed in a car after noticing a vehicle behind her for some time. She said she lost €18,000 (£15.5k) worth of equipment, clothes and jewellery. 'There's been a drastic jump in crime in tourist areas between Barcelona and the French border,' she said. 'There's a big change towards tourists, we're prey and easy pickings, and honestly, I don't think the police cared. 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El Salvador extends pretrial detention for 80,000 gang suspects 2 more years
El Salvador extends pretrial detention for 80,000 gang suspects 2 more years

The Independent

timea day ago

  • The Independent

El Salvador extends pretrial detention for 80,000 gang suspects 2 more years

El Salvador's Congress voted Friday to give government prosecutors two more years to hold the more than 80,000 people swept up under the state of emergency while they investigate alleged ties to the country's gangs. The Congress, controlled by President Nayib Bukele's New Ideas party and its allies, voted 57 to 3 in favor of extending the period of pretrial incarceration. Attorney General Rodolfo Delgado said that with the extension authorities could carry out more complete investigations, present solid evidence and win sentences against members of organized crime. Lawmakers also gave the government the option of extending for another 12 months if necessary. Improved public safety under the state of emergency has swelled Bukele's popularity, but the suspension of some constitutional rights and general lack of due process has drawn criticism within and outside El Salvador. Opposition lawmaker Claudia Ortiz of the VAMOS party, said Friday it showed the government's 'inability to deliver justice.' 'They've had more than two years to do a serious investigation of all of the cases and be able to take all of those detained to trial, and since they haven't done it on time, the (National) Assembly has to do a favor for the Attorney General's Office,' she said. Following an outburst of gang violence in March 2022, Bukele asked lawmakers for extraordinary powers to respond to a gang massacre. Among the rights the Congress agreed to suspend were the maximum time period take a prisoner before a judge, as well as fundamental protections like access to a lawyer. Since then, more than 88,000 people have been arrested for alleged ties to gangs, with 90% still awaiting trial. In July 2023, the Congress voted to give the government 24 months to prosecute a group of gang members. That period is up this month on Aug. 25. Delgado said the plan is to carry out hundreds of mass trials as they've been able to sort the accused into groups. 'This big quantity of people isn't going to be judged in one or two weeks,' Delgado said. 'It takes a considerable amount of time for the judges to receive the evidence that links each one of them and then later issue verdicts according to each corresponding law.'

UN Commission urges Latin America to diversify markets to confront Trump's tariffs
UN Commission urges Latin America to diversify markets to confront Trump's tariffs

Reuters

timea day ago

  • Reuters

UN Commission urges Latin America to diversify markets to confront Trump's tariffs

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