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In 2013 a young woman, Beatriz had been denied an abortion, even though she was seriously ill and the foetus would not have survived outside the uterus. Beatriz died after being involved in a traffic accident in 2017, but her case is before judges at the inter-American court of human rights and could open the way for El Salvador to decriminalise abortion, which could also set an important precedent in across the Caribbean, South and Central America, abortion is not permitted in seven countries.

In El Salvador, abortion can be punished by up to eight years in prison, and women can even be charged with aggravated homicide, which carries a sentence of up to 50 years in prison. Women have been jailed for miscarriages. And women who advocate for safe access to abortion facing hate and threats online as well as offline.

The Global Center for Human Rights, a US-based anti-abortion organisation linked to conservative evangelical groups and the Heritage Foundation opposes what it calls “ideological colonisation [of] countries rooted in Christian values”. They create websites, petitions and videos where to spread fake news like that Beatriz case was made up by the inter-American court to legalize abortion but also to spread hate against abortion activists by for example calling them “enemy of the state”, a “colleague of terrorists” and a “feminazi”.

This has serious consequences. An activist telles the Guardian: “I have received a lot of threats and hate speech on social networks, especially on X,” she says. “A post can lead to a wave of comments where I’m called a murderer; people accuse me of promoting a crime and there are requests that the attorney general investigate me.”  Anti-abortion groups often gather outside her office to pray, which she sees as an act of intimidation. Her organisation’s website was the target of 13,000 cyber-attacks during the hearing of the landmark case of Manuela v El Salvador at the IACHR in 2021.

News Article
In 2017, El Salvador banned all metals mining above ground and below. A broad coalition of sectors, including the Catholic church, supported the prohibition in order to protect the small country’s water resources from contamination.
 
President Bukele who supported a mining ban during his first campaign for the presidency in 2019 now wants to lift the country’s ban on gold mining and proposes “modern and sustainable” mining that would care for the environment. 
 
“It’s not true that there’s green mining, it’s paid for with lives, kidney, respiratory problems and leukemia that aren’t immediate,” said Amalia López with the Alliance Against the Privatization of Water. The Archbishop José Luis Escobar Alas is also against the President's plans and asked President Nayib Bukele not to reverse the ban.
News Article
Hundreds of Salvadorans protested to demand the release of “innocent” individuals imprisoned during President Nayib Bukele’s crackdown on gangs.
“Freedom now,” read a banner carried by members of the Victims of the Regime Movement (Movir). Approximately 83,000 alleged gang members have been imprisoned under the state of emergency, which allows for arrests without warrants. However, according to humanitarian organizations such as Socorro Jurídico Humanitario, Cristosal, and Movir, around 30,000 of those detained are “innocent.”
The demonstration, which took place in the historic center of the city, was joined by doctors and teachers calling for improved public services
News Article
 
The founder and publisher of elPeriódico, one of the most important oppositional newspapers in Guatemala, was ordered to return to jail after a appeals court overturned the order of freeing him.
 
He was convicted last year of money laundering, sentenced to six years in prison and fined about $40,000. He called the charges politically motivated and said they were retaliation for his newspaper’s focus on public corruption. The case became a sign of crumbling democracy in Guatemala and a symbol of threats against press freedom across Latin America.
 
The IRTF wrote several letters about Zamora as part of the Rapid Response Network, these are two of them:
News Article

During the country’s civil war, in November 1989, a military commando stormed the Jesuit Central American University (Uca) campus, killing its rector, the Spanish priest Ignacio Ellacuría, five of his colleagues – Ignacio Martín Baró, Segundo Montes, Juan Ramón Moreno, Joaquín López y López, Amando López, along with Elba and Celina Ramos.

Now the former president Alfredo Cristiani, a former congressman and nine retired military officials are charged with murder and acts of terrorism over one of the most notorious crimes committed during the 12-year war, which left 75,000 civilians dead and only formally ended in 1992.

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