Law in Contemporary Society
It is strongly recommended that you include your outline in the body of your essay by using the outline as section titles. The headings below are there to remind you how section and subsection titles are formatted.

Price of Security

-- By JacobLucero - 23 Apr 2024

Throughout the years El Salvador has been synonymous with gang violence and political turmoil. After my family immigrated to the United States from El Salvador we would hear of the dangerous conditions and societal struggles from family and friends. A few years ago, in 2019, the country saw President Nayib Bukele take power with great promise to address the country’s most pressing issues. To tackle these issues, President Bukele has leveraged the government’s military and police power in an effort to establish control and crack down on crime. Yet, while crime rates have dropped drastically, it has been offset by a disregard for Salvadoran’s civil rights. A look into El Salvador’s current political state offers a stark view into the complexities of enforcing law and order in a crime-ridden society while maintaining civil liberties.

In March 2022, after a spike in homicides in which over 80 people were killed in a single weekend, the Salvadoran government resorted to declaring a state of emergency. In this instance, the Legislative Assembly gave the executive branch absolute control over the legislature. It allowed for the suspension of due process and judicial guarantees such as short time limits for administrative detention and the right to defense, freedom of association and assembly, and the inviolability of correspondence and telecommunications. Overnight, rights like the presumption of innocence and the right to be informed of the crime for which one is being detained were suspended in the name of restoring order and public safety.

During the state of exception there has been frequent use of arbitrary detentions. This measure, supposedly aimed at controlling gang violence, has led to arrests under conditions that include suspension of privacy rights and legal defenses. Thousands of arrests have been made with no warrant from the court or prosecutor and with no prior evidence. There have been numerous cases where detainees were held without being informed of their charges, often based on nebulous criteria such as having a “suspicious appearance” or simply being in a low-income area. The absence of civil procedures that protect individuals’ rights has been overlooked by the public’s hyperfixation on lower crime rates. Yet, deprivation of fundamental rights, while acting as a stopgap solution for crime, sets the stage for future transgressions to be perpetuated through the actions of government figures and law enforcement agents. Essentially, it is trading one evil for another, an exchange or perpetrators from low-income gang affiliates to uniform-wearing enforcers.

The Salvadoran judiciary faces accusations of significant overreach, marked by forced retirements and dismissals of judges threatening judicial independence. With Bukele's party holding a two-thirds majority, the Legislative Assembly removed and replaced the attorney general and all five judges of the Supreme Court’s Constitutional Chamber, appointing an additional five judges, surpassing the allowable quota. This judicial overreach paves the way for rapid and unjust political reforms jeopardizing the freedom of Salvadorans. Moreover, laws were passed permitting the Supreme Court and the attorney general to dismiss judges and prosecutors over 60 and expand their powers to transfer them to new positions, flouting international human rights standards. These laws have been used to remove or relocate independent judges or prosecutors. In 2021, a ruling by the new Constitutional Chamber allowed President Bukele to pursue re-election, departing from established jurisprudence barring immediate re-election, further highlighting the erosion of judicial independence.

Another grave issue is the government's surveillance tactics. The use of Pegasus spyware to illegally monitor journalists and activists has been documented, with significant evidence pointing to the infiltration of individuals’ devices ranging from reporters at notable publications to members of human rights groups. This form of state-level espionage represents a severe infringement on privacy and freedom of the press, impeding the flow of information to the greater public about the true state of privacy invasion. Instead, only press that views the current administration in a positive light is allowed to be shared. This creates a fabrication of social realities that provide a misconception about the Bukele administration as being one that upholds the best interests of the Salvadoran people. In January, the assembly passed a law limiting scrutiny of "strategic projects of public utility," as defined by the Council of Ministers, increasing corruption opportunities. Previously, Attorney General Raśl Melara, removed in May 2021, was probing six officials for corruption tied to Covid-19 response. In January 2022, the Attorney General's Office raided prosecutors investigating corruption and officials' gang negotiations, leading four to flee fearing persecution.

El Salvador's community risks significant harm if it becomes complacent with the injustices perpetrated under President Nayib Bukele's administration, even if these are offset by low crime rates and international acclaim. This complacency undermines the very fabric of democracy and human rights. The normalization of states of emergency and the accompanying human rights abuses risk becoming institutionalized. This state of affairs allows for a wide range of rights suspensions and procedural guarantees, which, once entrenched, are difficult to reverse. The Salvadoran population may gradually accept these conditions as the new normal, thereby diminishing expectations for governmental accountability and transparency. Complacency towards these actions can lead to a judiciary that is no longer capable of acting as an effective check on executive power. This erosion of checks and balances is detrimental to the functioning of a democratic society. By ignoring these issues due to a focus on short-term gains in security, Salvadorans risk entrenching a governance model that prioritizes control over justice. Future administrations may adopt similar tactics, knowing that the public prioritizes immediate safety over fundamental freedoms. Only through concerted national and international efforts can El Salvador hope to restore faith in its judicial and law enforcement systems, and uphold the fundamental rights and dignities of its people.


You are entitled to restrict access to your paper if you want to. But we all derive immense benefit from reading one another's work, and I hope you won't feel the need unless the subject matter is personal and its disclosure would be harmful or undesirable. To restrict access to your paper simply delete the "#" character on the next two lines:

Note: TWiki has strict formatting rules for preference declarations. Make sure you preserve the three spaces, asterisk, and extra space at the beginning of these lines. If you wish to give access to any other users simply add them to the comma separated ALLOWTOPICVIEW list.

Navigation

Webs Webs

r2 - 24 Apr 2024 - 15:49:58 - JacobLucero
This site is powered by the TWiki collaboration platform.
All material on this collaboration platform is the property of the contributing authors.
All material marked as authored by Eben Moglen is available under the license terms CC-BY-SA version 4.
Syndicate this site RSSATOM