El Salvador's Bukele pushes through life sentences in nation that has imprisoned 1% of population

This version of El Salvadors Bukele Pushes Life Sentences Nation Imprisoned 1 Populati Rcna264047 - World News | NBC News Clone was adapted by NBC News Clone to help readers digest key facts more efficiently.

President Nayib Bukel's reforms have been sharply criticized for undermining the country’s delicate democracy.
Salvadoran Government Receives 238 Alleged Members Of Criminal Organizations 'Tren De Aragua' and 'MS13'
Inmates are lined up at CECOT, a massive prison in El Salvador in 2025.Salvadoran government via Getty Images file
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SAN SALVADOR — El Salvador’s Congress approved a constitutional amendment pushed forward by President Nayib Bukele on Tuesday to permit life sentences in a country that has imprisoned more than 1% of its population in its war against gangs.

The reform was presented by Bukele’s security cabinet earlier in the day before El Salvador’s legislature, which is firmly in control of the populist leader’s party.

The measure was approved by 59 of the 60 lawmakers, and is slated to be ratified next week.

It comes as Bukele has pushed forward rounds of constitutional reforms, which have been sharply criticized for chipping away at checks and balances as well as undermining the country’s delicate democracy.

“We will see who supports this reform and who dares to defend the idea that the Constitution should continue prohibiting murderers and rapists from remaining in prison,” Bukele wrote in a post on X on Tuesday.

In August, the government pushed through another reform that would do away with presidential term limits, paving the way for Bukele to stay in power indefinitely. Legal experts widely consider Bukele’s second term, that began in 2024 to violate the constitution, which prohibits consecutive reelection.

The latest reform builds upon other measures Bukele has taken to combat El Salvador’s gangs, including a state of emergency that began in March 2022 following a wave of gang violence.

The measure, which is meant to be temporary but has been extended for nearly four years, suspends key constitutional rights and has led to around 91,300 people being detained.

Human rights groups have documented cases of arbitrary detentions for years, with one group even alleging before the Inter-American Commission on Human Rights (IACHR) that the vast majority of those imprisoned under the state of emergency were arbitrarily detained. Bukele sharply criticized the allegation, but he has said that 8,000 innocent people have been released.

Emboldened by Bukele’s alliance with U.S. President Donald Trump, the government has also gone after its enemies, detaining critics and activists, and increasingly forcing journalists and opposition voices to choose between exile or prison.

Those detained under the state of exception are held in prisons with little evidence, under vague accusations by authorities, and with very little access to due process. Prisoners are often judged in mass trials and lawyers regularly lose track of where their clients are.

Officials in Bukele’s government have previously vowed that gang members detained “will never return” to the streets.

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