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Inmates belonging to the MS-13 and 18 gangs arrive at the new prison in Tecoluca, El Salvador on Friday. Photo: Salvadorean Presidency via AFP

El Salvador moves thousands to ‘mega prison’ amid gang crackdown

  • The 40,000-person facility – thought to be the largest in the Americas – is opening as a wave of anti-crime arrests sends the nation’s inmate population soaring
  • El Salvador has suspended some constitutional rights as part of a controversial move to deal with a dramatic spike in murders attributed to violent gangs

El Salvador’s government moved thousands of suspected gang members to a newly opened “mega prison” on Friday, the latest step in a controversial crackdown on crime that has caused the Central American nation’s prison population to soar.

“This will be their new home, where they won’t be able to do any more harm to the population,” President Nayib Bukele wrote on Twitter.

Around 2,000 accused gang members were moved to the 40,000-person-capacity prison, considered to be the largest in the Americas, early on Friday morning.

In a video posted by Bukele, prisoners stripped down to white shorts, with their heads shaved, are seen running through the new prison into cells. Many bear gang tattoos.

El Salvador’s new mega prison is seen in Tecoluca, southeast of San Salvador, on Friday. Photo by Salvadorean Presidency via AFP

Bukele asked his allies in El Salvador’s Congress to pass a state of exception last year, which has since been extended several times, that suspends some constitutional rights after a dramatic spike in murders attributed to violent gangs.

Since then, more than 64,000 suspects have been arrested in the anti-crime dragnet.

Arrests can be made without a warrant, private communications are accessible by the government, and detainees no longer have the right to a lawyer.

Human rights organisations argue that innocent people have been caught up in the policy, including at least dozens who have died in police custody.

But Bukele’s anti-gang push remains widely popular with Salvadoreans, and the country’s security minister said it would continue until all criminals are captured.

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