The Salvadoran government has sparked a fresh international debate after the Legislative Assembly approved sweeping legal reforms that allow for life imprisonment for minors as young as 12 years old. This move quickly drew a sharp rebuke from the United Nations Human Rights office. Marta Hurtado, a spokesperson for the High Commissioner, expressed deep concern over the changes, noting that they contradict international standards. We urge the authorities of El Salvador to promptly review the concerning constitutional and legal changes adopted last week, which provide for life imprisonment for children from the age of 12, Hurtado stated, emphasizing that international law requires the deprivation of liberty for minors to be a measure of last resort.
President Nayib Bukele responded to the UN’s criticism with a detailed historical defense of the new measures, linking the current crisis to foreign interventions and past international recommendations. He pointed specifically to the aftermath of the Salvadoran Civil War and the 1994 Juvenile Offender Law, which he claims was pushed by outside organizations under the same humanitarian pretexts used today. Do you remember April 27, 1994? Perhaps you don’t, but we do, Bukele wrote on X, arguing that those specific laws created an environment of total impunity for young offenders just as the social landscape was about to change drastically.
The President’s argument centers on the late 1990s, when the United States began large-scale deportations of Salvadorans who had formed gangs in cities like Los Angeles. According to Bukele, these deportees returned to a country where the legal system prevented the effective prosecution of minors. Three years later, Bill Clinton deported the Salvadorans who had formed gangs in the United States. They arrived in El Salvador and found a law that practically gave impunity to those under 18 years of age to commit crimes, Bukele explained. He contends that this legal loophole allowed gangs to recruit children almost exclusively, leading to decades of unprecedented violence.
Bukele maintains that the lenient policies suggested by the international community in the past turned El Salvador into the murder capital of the world, resulting in hundreds of thousands of deaths and millions of displaced citizens. By framing the new life sentencing laws as a necessary correction to a failed historical experiment, he positioned the UN’s current suggestions as out of touch with the reality of Salvadoran suffering. So no, thank you very much. Take your social experiments to other countries that have not suffered what we have suffered, the President concluded, reinforcing his stance that the nation will not return to the legal frameworks of the past.
The Salvadoran government remains focused on its internal security strategy, prioritizing the protection of the general population over traditional rehabilitative models that have historically fueled the rise of the country’s most dangerous criminal organizations.