No menu items!

COSTA RICA'S LEADING ENGLISH LANGUAGE NEWSPAPER

HomeTopicsCrimeEl Salvador moves 400 jailed gang members as part of plan to...

El Salvador moves 400 jailed gang members as part of plan to curb violence

SAN SALVADOR, El Salvador — Some 400 gang members were transferred on Friday from prisons in northern and eastern El Salvador to one with higher security in Izalco, 66 kilometers west of the capital, in order to cut off communication with their gangs and prevent new crimes, an official source reported.

The country’s prison administration announced via its Twitter account “the transfer of 400 inmates from the prisons in Ciudad Barrios and Chalatenango (respectively, 153 kilometers east and 80 kilometers north of San Salvador) to the prison in Izalco.”

According to the country’s prison administration, the transferred prisoners are “more dangerous criminals,” who will be in Izalco in “a higher security regime.”

The prison administration did not specify which of the gangs operating in the country the inmates belong to. Another 1,100 prisoners were relocated early this week in different prison facilities.

Prison administration head Rodil Hernández recently said the transfers are taking place “to cut off all channels of communication” allowing jailed leaders to order their gangs, or maras, to commit crimes outside the prisons.

The relocations had been announced a couple of weeks ago by President Salvador Sánchez Cerén, among a series of measures aimed at fighting off criminal violence, which has increased over the past months, particularly against state security forces.

According to the authorities, 23 policemen and six members of the military have been killed by gangs this year. A total of 1,194 people were killed in El Salvador between January 1 to April 5, according to official estimates.

The President has also ordered the creation of “immediate reaction” battalions, one in the police and three in the army, to combat gangs.

Local media published a communiqué on Friday in which gangs commit to respecting the lives of policemen, soldiers, prison guards, judges, public officials and politicians, and reducing murders in general.

“As of now we are instructing our units to remain garrisoned, and to store the weapons,” the dangerous Mara Salvatrucha and Barrio 18 gangs said in their communiqué, according to El Diario de Hoy.

Authorities estimate there are some 70,000 gang members in the country, 10,000 of whom are in prison.

 

 

Trending Now

Junior Tennis Stars Shine as Copa del Café 2026 Concludes

The 61st edition of the Copa del Café wrapped up on January 24 at the Costa Rica Country Club in Escazú, where young tennis...

Don’t Let an Expired or Missing Costa Rican Cédula Keep You from the Polls

With national elections set for February 1, Costa Rican citizens face a final push to secure their identity cards before heading to the polls....

Sinner Marches into Australian Open Quarterfinals as Heat Builds

Jannik Sinner’s bid for a third straight Australian Open title is intact, and for most of Monday it looked routine, even in the kind...

Poás Volcano National Park Remains Shut as Bridge Repairs Drag On

Travelers planning a visit to Poás Volcano National Park face ongoing disruptions after authorities extended the closure of the site's main access route. The...

Novak Djokovic Advances to Australian Open Semifinals After Musetti Retires

Novak Djokovic reached the semifinals of the Australian Open on January 27, 2026, when Lorenzo Musetti retired from their quarterfinal match. The Serbian trailed...

Costa Rican Journalists Face Rising Hate Speech, Study Warns of Hostile Shift

Journalists in Costa Rica face a tougher environment than in past years, with nearly half reporting derogatory or hateful speech aimed at them. A...
Costa Rica Coffee Maker Chorreador
Costa Rica Coffee Maker Chorreador
Costa Rica Travel Insurance
Costa Rica Travel

Latest News from Costa Rica