El Salvador destroys gang members' gravestones

El Salvador destroys gang members' gravestones
El Salvador destroys gang members' gravestones

The government of El Salvador, engaged in a controversial "war" on gangs, is destroying the tombstones of gang members to prevent them from becoming shrines, the government said.

Urging members of the public to report the locations of gangster graves, Justice Minister Osiris Luna Meza tweeted: "In El Salvador there is NO space for terrorists."

He published photos of grave stones being hammered or pickaxed to pieces, several of them bearing the initials "MS-13" for the Mara Salvatrucha gang, one of the most violent in El Salvador.

The destruction started early this week in a municipal cemetery west of the capital San Salvador, to coincide with Day of the Dead commemorations held across Latin America for deceased relatives.

It did not specify how many gravestones have been destroyed.

Eight months of what President Nayib Bukele has labelled a "war" on criminal groups has netted more than 55,600 suspected gangsters in a crackdown that has been welcomed and criticised in equal measure.

As part of the clampdown, the Central American country has increased sentences for gang membership five-fold, to up to 45 years, and Bukele has ordered the construction of a gigantic prison for 40,000 gang members.

Rights groups have denounced the arbitrary arrest of many people, including minors, with no gang links, but many citizens have welcomed a relative calm after a wave of gang violence that left dozens dead.