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Police free 11 guards held hostage in Guatemalan prisons
Police free 11 guards held hostage in Guatemalan prisons

Washington Post

time6 days ago

  • Washington Post

Police free 11 guards held hostage in Guatemalan prisons

GUATEMALA CITY — Anti-kidnapping teams freed 11 guards overnight after they were held hostage by gang members for most of a day in two Guatemalan prisons, demanding that authorities move their imprisoned leaders to other facilities. Deputy Security Minister José Portillo confirmed the guards' release shortly before midnight Tuesday, but didn't provide any details. It remained unclear on Wednesday what, if any, concessions the government made, but the National Civil Police said in a statement that anti-kidnapping teams had freed guards in both prisons. Authorities had retaken control of both prisons. Police also said they had recovered the hostages' guns and cell phones, as well as five pistols the prisoners carried. It said five inmates were responsible and would face charges. Riots had broken out early Tuesday in two prisons in Guatemala City, where the guards were captured by members of the rival Barrio 18 and Mara Salvatrucha gangs. A guard and an inmate who suffered bullet wounds in the melee were evacuated during the course of the day to receive medical treatment. Videos circulated online by the prisoners showed the guards blindfolded with their hands bound. In one, a prisoner read a statement saying the gangs wanted their leaders returned to the prisons where they were previously housed, something Guatemala's interior minister had earlier ruled out. ____ Follow AP's coverage of Latin America and the Caribbean at

Police free 11 guards held hostage in Guatemalan prisons
Police free 11 guards held hostage in Guatemalan prisons

Toronto Star

time6 days ago

  • Politics
  • Toronto Star

Police free 11 guards held hostage in Guatemalan prisons

GUATEMALA CITY (AP) — Anti-kidnapping teams freed 11 guards overnight after they were held hostage by gang members for most of a day in two Guatemalan prisons, demanding that authorities move their imprisoned leaders to other facilities. Deputy Security Minister José Portillo confirmed the guards' release shortly before midnight Tuesday, but didn't provide any details. It remained unclear on Wednesday what, if any, concessions the government made, but the National Civil Police said in a statement that anti-kidnapping teams had freed guards in both prisons. Authorities had retaken control of both prisons.

Guatemalan town struggles to recover after border shootout

time31-07-2025

Guatemalan town struggles to recover after border shootout

LA MESILLA, Guatemala -- Nearly two months after Mexican police crossed the border into this Guatemalan town in pursuit of alleged criminals, La Mesilla hasn't fully recovered. Like many remote border towns, it lives from commerce — legal and illegal — but locals say things still haven't returned to normal since Mexican state police drove armored vehicles into the downtown and engaged in a daytime shootout in June. On Wednesday, more than 600 Guatemalan police and soldiers carried out nearly two dozen raids in the surrounding areas, but managed to seize only two guns without making an arrest, according to the Interior Ministry. A criminal organization tied to Mexico's powerful Jalisco New Generation Cartel controls the area, making locals reluctant to talk. A man who sells clothing in La Mesilla said that when he saw the shootout, he used the border much like the criminals do. 'I ran, left everything; it didn't matter, I ran to the Mexican side,' he said. 'We were afraid. When we saw that everything was alright, we returned, we grabbed everything and left.' That's similar to what led to the shootout on La Mesilla's main drag steps from the border. Mexican police chased suspects they had engaged with in Mexico who fled into Guatemala. 'People want to forget what happened, but there's still fear,' the young man said. The incident was similar to another border escape a year earlier when hundreds of Mexican citizens fled into Guatemala to escape the violence sparked by the competition to control border crossings between the Jalisco and Sinaloa cartels. Some of those Mexicans spent months in Guatemala as refugees. The cartels want to control the crossing of drugs, migrants and guns. Another vendor said sales still hadn't returned to normal. 'That Sunday (of the shootout) was the market day, there were a lot of people,' he said. 'Today we feel safer because there are more police, but sales haven't recovered.' The organization that authorities targeted Wednesday had been led by a father-son duo, who were both killed previously in a clash with Mexican police. Guatemala's Interior Ministry said Wednesday's operation was carried out in coordination with Mexico to attempt to keep the targets from escaping across the border. It was unknown where they had gone. Lusvin López, chief of the National Civil Police antidrug unit, said Wednesday's operation was in response the shootout in June. The United States government also provided support, according to the Interior Ministry, which didn't provide details.

El Salvador Arrests and Disappears Prominent Human Rights Attorney
El Salvador Arrests and Disappears Prominent Human Rights Attorney

Yahoo

time19-05-2025

  • Politics
  • Yahoo

El Salvador Arrests and Disappears Prominent Human Rights Attorney

El Salvador's National Civil Police have arrested Ruth Eleonora López, a renowned human rights and anti-corruption attorney who has become one of the nation's most prominent critics of President Nayib Bukele's regime. According to representatives from Cristosal, the human rights group where López serves as Chief Legal Officer for Anti-Corruption; members of López's family; and reports in Salvadoran media, López was taken from her home late Sunday night. In the time since her arrest, she has reportedly been refused access to her attorneys, and has not been able to contact members of her family. The arrest also came on the heels of a particularly tumultuous week for the Bukele government, which is facing growing public backlash amid a spate of repressive actions against civil society and Salvadorans alike. On Monday, Amnesty International and a coalition of U.S. and international human rights groups condemned the arrest, and called on Salvadoran authorities to immediately release Ruth López,' and 'guarantee her physical safety and due process rights. 'We also urge U.S. policymakers and the diplomatic community at large to urge President Bukele to cease all attacks against human rights defenders,' the group wrote. Noah Bullock, head of Cristosal, told Rolling Stone on Monday that López had been arrested late on Sunday. Bullock's account of the arrest was relayed to him by López's partner, who was present as she was detained, but did not immediately respond to a request for comment from Rolling Stone. Bullock says police told López' 'that they had a complaint about her car having been in an accident, and that they wanted to verify the owner and things like that, and then Ruth needed to come out.' Police 'tricked' her into coming out of the house, Bullock says, 'and then once she was there they took out a pretty simple order from the attorney general to arrest her.' Lopez, who was in pajama shorts, then requested to be allowed to change. 'She asked if she could put her pants on at least, and they wouldn't let her go back into the house and forced her to put pants on on the street in front of all of her neighbors.' According to a video of the arrest obtained by El Diario de Hoy, López told officers to 'have decency,' because one day the sort of impunity they enjoyed 'will end.' Within minutes of the arrest, the Salvadoran attorney general's Office posted a tweet with a photo of López handcuffed between two officers, writing that she had been charged with embezzlement stemming from her time working in the office of Eugenio Chicas, a former magistrate and ex-president of the Supreme Electoral Tribunal of El Salvador, who has been incarcerated since February on similar charges. The attorney general wrote that López had 'collaborated in the theft of funds from the state coffers.' Chicas — with López's legal assistance — successfully sued Bukele in a 2017 defamation case. López denied the charges during her arrest after an officer said he would 'explain' her situation to her. 'Here, the only reason for my arrest is that I'm a human rights defender and I work for an NGO that's inconvenient for the government; that's the only problem,' she says in the video. 'There's nothing to explain — about embezzlement, corruption — when I'm the one investigating corruption here.' Upon learning of the arrest, Cristosal dispatched 'a lawyer, a criminal lawyer, to go and present himself as her representative, verify where she is and that she's in good condition,' Bullock says. 'He arrived at that place, and they said that she wasn't there, and the place looked desolate. It didn't look like anybody was really there, and the police were really hostile with him.' Bullock adds that the attorney waited a while, before returning to the precinct, announcing himself as López's representative and asking to see her, only to be told she was not there. López's partner was later told he could deliver medication for López at another detention center, but has not had direct contact with her. Cristosal has since denounced López's arrest, and subsequent isolation from her attorneys and family, as a temporary forced disappearance. In a statement issued early Monday morning, the organization wrote that López is 'likely the victim of a short-term enforced disappearance, which constitutes a serious human rights violation under international law.' 'The authorities' refusal to disclose her location or to allow access to her legal representatives is a blatant violation of due process, the right to legal defense, and international standards of judicial protection,' the organization wrote, adding a demand that the Salvadoran government immediately disclose the location of her detention, grant her access to her legal representation, and give 'effective guarantees for her physical, psychological, and legal integrity.' López, who last year was named one of the BBC's 100 most influential women, has a long history of exposing wrongdoing by the Bukele government and publicly defending the civil and humanitarian rights of those crushed under El Salvador's regime of exemption. Last year López helped lead an investigation that determined that Bukele's notorious Terrorism Confinement Center (CECOT) mega-prison was polluting the water supply of local communities by illegally dumping sewage from the prison. In 2022, López, through Cristosal, led a complaint against the Bukele government for the alleged use of government funds to install spyware in the communication devices of journalists and human rights activists. Just last month, López confronted police officers who attempted to interrupt a Cristosal press conference with Kerry Kennedy, the niece of former President John F. Kennedy, who traveled to the country to meet with clients unlawfully deported from the U.S. to CECOT. According to a statement from Cristosal about the encounter, two National Civil Police (PNC) officers entered the organization's facilities during a press conference and began recording the organizations offices, as well as the vehicles of media, staff, and others present at the event. The officers claimed they had 'come to verify a 'supposed pro-Venezuelan demonstration and a press conference.'' Bullock tells Rolling Stone that while Cristosal has become used to police presence at their events and harassment by law enforcement, López's arrest comes during an acute increase in the government's repressive attitude towards non profits and human rights organizations. 'They haven't been able to control the narrative, and now they're cracking down,' Bullock says, noting that last week Bukele announced he would be implementing a hefty tax on foreign donations to nonprofits operating in El Salvador, many of whom are critical of the government's autocratic policies. In an April Rolling Stone interview on the conditions of El Salvador's prisons, and the lack of due process and respect for human rights within the nation's prison system, López warned that the checks and balances placed on the powers of functional democracies exist for the protection of the population. When they are eroded, 'the population ends up suffering those consequences.' With Lopez now in detention, one of the most critical voices in defense of Salvadoran civil society has been cut off from the world. 'We're hoping that they treat her fairly while she's in prison,' Bullock says of López's detention, 'I think it's probably unlikely.' More from Rolling Stone Jen Psaki on Launching a Primetime TV Show During Trump's 'Dangerous' Presidency Trump, Who Owes His Freedom to Due Process, Is Destroying It for Everyone Else 'Wasting Judicial Resources': Judge Shreds Trump Admin's Alien Enemies Act Case Best of Rolling Stone The Useful Idiots New Guide to the Most Stoned Moments of the 2020 Presidential Campaign Anatomy of a Fake News Scandal The Radical Crusade of Mike Pence

El Salvador president orders arrest of of bus company heads for defying free transport order
El Salvador president orders arrest of of bus company heads for defying free transport order

Arab Times

time06-05-2025

  • Politics
  • Arab Times

El Salvador president orders arrest of of bus company heads for defying free transport order

SAN SALVADOR, El Salvador, May 6, (AP): El Salvador President Nayib Bukele ordered police via social media on Monday to arrest five heads of bus companies in the Central American country after they defied his order to offer free transport for a week following a major highway closure. The order was another example of Bukele's heavy-handed tactics. The second-term leader has been accused of undermining democratic institutions, punishing dissenters and denying access to due process under a "state of emergency' that he declared in 2022 to battle the country's powerful street gangs. Despite the crackdown, the government has denied the country is a police state. On Sunday, Bukele had announced via X that all bus fares for a week would be completely free due to construction the government was carrying out on one of the main highways running through San Salvador. The order resulted in widespread chaos on Monday, fueling long bus lines in the Salvadoran capital and overcrowded buses that skipped stops on a number of routes. In response, Bukele ordered the capture of five heads of bus companies Monday, accusing them of "sabotaging the country.' He claimed that the government was covering "100% of the income they normally receive per day,' but The Associated Press was not immediately able to verify the information with bus drivers. "The National Civil Police should proceed with the arrest of the owners of the routes involved,' Bukele wrote on a social media post. "No one is above the law.' Later Monday, the country's federal police department posted photos of the handcuffed men surrounded by heavily armed officers, saying they had been detained for "breach of duty, denial of assistance, and extortion,' providing few details on their arrests. The National Transportation Committee, which represents the companies involved, said in a statement that they were surprised by the arrests. They blamed confusion on some routes on the fact that the free rides had been announced just a day earlier and they weren't able to notify everyone.

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