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National Civil Police (El Salvador)

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National Civil Police of El Salvador
Policía Nacional Civil de El Salvador
Emblem of the PNC
Emblem of the PNC
Flag of the PNC
Flag of the PNC
Common nameNational Civil Police
AbbreviationPNC
MottoServicio, Orden, Seguridad
(Service, Order, Safety)
Agency overview
FormedJanuary 16, 1992
Preceding agency
Employees34,000
Jurisdictional structure
National agencyEl Salvador
Federal agencyEl Salvador
Operations jurisdictionEl Salvador
The PNC covers the Salvadoran territory.
Governing bodyMinistry of Justice and Public Safety of El Salvador
Constituting instrument
General nature
Operational structure
HeadquartersSan Salvador, El Salvador
Commissioners responsible
  • Vacant, Director general
  • César Baldemar Flores Murillo, Sub-Director general
Divisions
5
  • Traffic
  • Tourism
  • General Inspection
  • Community
  • ANSP
Bureaus
6
  • Crime Stoppers
  • Emergencies
  • Police Solvency
  • Haremos Justicia
  • Anti-Extorsions
  • Complaints
Website
www.pnc.gob.sv

The National Civil Police of El Salvador (Spanish: Policía Nacional Civil de El Salvador), also known as PNC, is the national civilian police of El Salvador. Although the National Civil Police is not part of the Armed Forces of El Salvador (Army, Navy, and Air Force), it constitutes along with them the "Civilian Force".[1] It was created after the Peace Accords were signed at Chapultepec Castle in Mexico City on January 16, 1992, and began the operations on February 1, 1993, in order to guarantee the order, safety, and the public tranquility for every single corner of El Salvador. The PNC is a replacement of the National Police of El Salvador.

History

Between 1884 and 1889 the Rural Police (which would later become the National Police) and Mounted Police developed from the private armies of wealthy landowners.[2] In the early days of the Republic of El Salvador, the Civil Guard was created in 1867, which then gave way to the National Guard in 1912. At the end of the Salvadoran Civil War law enforcement bodies in El Salvador included the National Police (Policia Nacional), the Treasury Police, and the National Guard. All were part of the Armed Forces of El Salvador. According to the Truth Commission for El Salvador, these police agencies perpetrated many human rights abuses during the civil war. The civil war ended with the Chapultepec Peace Accords, which sets limitations on the involvement of the military in internal security and set expectations for the respect of human rights by security forces.[3] Establishing civilian control of law enforcement agencies was a central tenet of the peace accords which ended the war only after the government and the guerrillas agreed to create a new National Civil Police, incorporating both former police and ex-insurgents as well as a large proportion of previous non-combatants into its ranks. The office of U.S. Senate Majority Whip Alan Cranston (D-California) played a key role in brokering that final agreement, which included the U.S. Department of Justice taking the lead among international actors in establishing the new force.[4][5][6]

According to El Salvador's current constitution, the National Civil Police is the only force in charge of keeping order, security and public tranquility in the country, with different functions from the army. As part of the peace process, the National Guard and the Treasury Police were supposed to be abolished immediately; it took some time, but eventually was accomplished.[7]

The National Civil Police (PNC) emerged as the primary law enforcement agency by 1993, at which point José Maria Monterrey was appointed as the first Director General of the PNC.[8] In the 1990s the government attributed El Salvador’s high murder rates (65 out of every 100,000 people) to increasing gang related activity.[2] Under the administration of President Francisco Flores, the PNC attempted to crack down on gangs as part of a policy called Mano Dura or "Iron Fist".[2]

Despite the peace accords setting strict limits on the involvement of the military in the PNC, a retired military general, Francisco Ramon Salinas Rivera, was hired as the Director of the PNC in 2012. however, due to his ties with the military, the Supreme court viewed his appointment as violating the peace accords, and he was removed from office.[2] Rivera was replaced by Howard Augusto Cotto Castaneda in 2014, two years after his initial appointment was called into question.[9]

2022 Crackdown on gangs

Beginning on 25 March 2022, three days of gang-related violence occurred that left 87 people dead.[10] In response, President Bukele asked the Salvadoran parliament to ratify a state of emergency.[11] On 26 March, Bukele also ordered the police and army to initiate mass-arrests against those responsible for the violence.

A day later, Congress approved a "State of Emergency" that gives legal coverage to arrest any citizen suspected to be a gang member even with no proof. In addition, Congress also approved reforms to increase the maximum sentence for gang member from nine to 45 years in prison and punish the dissemination of gang messages, including independent journalism talking about the gang crisis, with up to 15 years in prison.

The law was directed against those who "mark" their territories with acronyms of the gangs, a practice that gang members use to intimidate, and threaten with death those who denounce them to the authorities. The Directorate of Penal Centers began to erase the graffiti that the gangs use to mark the territory in which they operate.

The Mara Salvatrucha (MS-13) and Barrio 18 gangs, among others, were estimated in 2022 to have around some 70,000 members, and as of August 2023, around 72,000 suspected gang members have been sent to prison as a part of the government crackdown on the gangs.[12]

Organization and responsibilities

According to the Chapultepec Peace Accords the PNC should not be connected to, or under the influence of any aspect of the Military forces. Within the PNC the Director General is at the top of the hierarchy. The President of the Republic of El Salvador has the power to appoint and replace the Director General of the PNC as they see fit; and under certain circumstances, such as a violation of human rights, the Legislator can suggest and enforce the removal of a Director General of the PNC.[13]

The Director General is responsible for hiring within the PNC, implementing public security policies, and drafting the PNC’s budget.[13] Additionally, the Director General oversees six main subdirectories: Public Security, Investigations, Specialized Operative Areas, Land transportation, Rural Police, and Administration and Finances.[13] The Deputy Director General is the second highest position in the PNC, overseeing the Deputy Directors of Investigations, Public Security, Administration, Intelligence, and Operational and Specialized Areas.[14] The Inspector General (who reports to the Director General of the PNC) monitors the PNC for violations of human rights and the Peace Accords. The PNC also contains the Disciplinary Investigation Unit, the Control Unit, and the Internal Affairs Unit which all hold members of the PNC accountable.[14]

Members of the PNC are organized into rank categories which contribute to the hierarchical structure of the institution. Police officers, Corporals and Sergeants are at the “Basic Level”; Sub-inspectors, Inspectors, and Chief Inspector fall within the “Executive Level”; and the “Superior Level” consists of the Sub-Commissioners and Commissioners.[13]

The National Academy of Public Security (ANSP) is the training academy of the National Civil Police,where recruits graduate from before becoming police officers.[13]In order to receive certain promotions or work on specialized units, PNC officers must successfully pass courses and exams associated with the potential position.[13]

Personnel and training

In order to enter the PNC as an officer, citizens are required to successfully complete training at the National Academy of Public Security (ANSP).[13] Officers graduate the ANSP with training in security and human rights. Throughout the course of their career, officers are also receive additional training in the newly emerging aspects of law enforcement.[13] In order to receive certain promotions or work on specialized units, PNC officers must successfully pass courses and exams associated with the potential position.[13]

Equipment

Weapons

Name Type Quantity Origin Notes
S&W 459 Handgun  United States Used by patrol officers but not all of them.
P227 Handgun  Germany All its variants. Used By soldiers and special forces.
P226 Handgun  Germany All its variants including the SIG Sauer X Six SIG P226 X Six. Used by soldiers and special forces.
M9[15] Handgun  United States
CZ 75[15] Handgun  Czech Republic
92FS[15] Handgun  Italy
Px4 Storm[15] Handgun  Italy
SW1911 Handgun  United States
IWI 941[15] Handgun  Israel
FN P35[15] Handgun  Belgium
MP5[15] Sub-machine gun  Germany MP5SD3, MP5A3, MP5A2, MP5, MP5A1, MP5K and Heckler & Koch MP5K-PDW.
40S&W SAF[15] Sub-machine gun  Chile
Maxim Defense PDX[16] Personal defense weapon  United States
HK33[15] Assault rifle  Germany Including HK53 variant
M4 Assault rifle  United States M4 Carbine, Colt M4A1, Colt M4, Colt M4 (original 1993 version), M4 (Colt Model 933), Colt M4 (M16A2 sights burst and full auto)
T65[15] Assault rifle  Taiwan
M16[15] Assault rifle  United States XM16E1, M16A1, M16A2, M16A3, M16A4, M16A1 with A2 handguards. M16A2 (Model 711, Model 715 and Model 720 (Burst fire/single fire)). Some M16A1's have M16A2's brass defectors, XM16E1. M16A2 (Model 645).
IMI Galil[15] Assault rifle  Israel Galil AR, Galil SAR, Galil SAR339, Micro Galil
Galil ACE Assault rifle  Colombia ACE 21, ACE 22, ACE 23 (5.56×45mm NATO), ACE 32 (7.62×39mm), ACE 52, ACE 53 (7.62×51mm NATO).
IWI ARAD Assault rifle  Israel
AK-47 Assault rifle  Soviet Union Used Since 2014.
AKM Assault rifle  Soviet Union Used Since 2014.
CAR-15[15] Carbine Rifle  United States Colt Model 933, XM177, GAU-5/A (Colt Model 610), XM177E1 (Colt Model 609), XM177E2 (Colt Model 629), Colt Model 653 (M16A1 Carbine), Colt Model 653 (M16A1 Carbine), Colt Model 654 (M16A1 Carbine), Colt Model 727 (M16A2 carbine), Colt Model 733 (M16A2 Commando). M16A2 SMG Model 635.
MPi-KM Assault rifle  East Germany Used since 2014.
Pistol Mitralieră model 1963/1965 Assault rifle  Romania Recovered from Gang members.
AK-63 Assault rifle  Hungary Used Since 2014.
SIG Sauer SSG 3000 Sniper rifle  Germany Used by Police Reaction Group (PRG) and now by the recently activated
SIG M400[15] Assault Rifle  Germany In February 2018, the director of the National Civil Police of El Salvador, Howard Cotto, announced the creation of the Specialized Police Tactical Unit (UTEP), which merges the Specialized Reaction Force El Salvador (FES) and the Group of Special Police Operations (GOPES). The UTEP replaces the Police Reaction Group, whose official dissolution was announced this afternoon. The last commander of this unit was Julio César Flores Castro, under whose direction the disappearance of the police Carla Ayala occurred.
SR-556 Carbine  United States
CK-901 Carbine  United States

The Salvadoran police uses the same kind of small arm types in all their branches. It also uses telescopic sights, Aimpoint T2 Micro, Ohuhu OH-RG-SC Reflex Sights (panoramic sights), EOTech EXPS 3-0 sights, Barska Holographic Reflex Red Dot Sight, Ozark Rihno Tactical Sights, Trijicon MRO-C sights, EOTech 512..A65 sights, Vortex Optics StrikeFire II sights, Burrist Fast BFire3, Tasco Red Dot Sights, CVLIFE Optics Hunting Rifle Scope 2.5x40e red and green illuminated crosshair mount sights in every single assault rifle of every branch of the police department.

Combatting gang violence

El Salvador is consistently ranked among the most violent countries in the world. In 1999 El Salvador’s homicide rate (65/100,000 people) was the highest in the region.[2] President Francisco Flores asserted that the increase in gang related activity was the cause of increasing violence and instituted the Mano Dura or “Iron Fist” approach to decreasing gang activity.[2] The Iron Fist approach to gang activity weakened the requirements for PNC officers to arrest and detain citizens. One law, created in 2003 under the Flores administration, made gang membership illegal; essentially allowing PNC officers to arrest citizens suspected of gang activity.[3]

In 2009 the election of President Mauricio Funes was the beginning of not only a major political transition but also a significant shift in strategies for combating gang activities. Funes’ election marked the first time that the leftist political party known as the Farabundo Marti National Liberation Front (FMLN) had won the presidency since it was founded at the end of the Civil War in 1992 by marxist guerrillas.[17] The Funes administration’s community and peace based approach to gang activity was in sharp contrast to his predecessor’s Iron Fist approach. Under the Funes administration, two prominent gangs (MS-13 and the 18th Street Gang) signed a truce in 2012 in an attempt to decrease intra-gang warfare.[2] Initially the government stated that they did not participate in the truce negotiations.[18] However, the government later announced it would accommodate and support the truce after as many as 30 high profile gang members were moved out of maximum security prisons and granted increased visitation rights. Thus, the government did not formally negotiate with criminals, but rather took steps to encourage the peace process.[18] The FMLN won the Presidency again in 2014 as Sanchez Ceren (the Vice President in the Funes administration) took office. Ceren's administration quickly demonstrated their intention to depart with Funes’ strategies by rejecting the truce and prosecuting officials who were involved in the process.[19] The political change from Funes to Ceren led to a shift back to more aggressive methods of combating gang violence by implementing policies reminiscent of the Mano Dura years. The resurgence of the “iron fist” approach to policing gang activity was part of Ceren’s plan, “El Salvador Seguro”.[20] With the truce abandoned in 2014, violence was rising again; by the end of 2015 El Salvador’s homicide rate (105/100,000) was not only the highest in the region, but the highest in the world.[2]

In accordance  with “El Salvador Seguro” the PNC implemented emergency measures in 2016 in attempt to reduce the homicide rate.[21] Law reforms implemented as part of the PNC’s emergency measures lead to the designation of gangs as terrorist organizations; effectively allowing the police to target and arrest citizens suspected of being gang members, or participating in gang related activity, with even less evidence.[22] While the harassment and mass incarceration of certain citizens based on limited evidence and suspected affiliation with a gang violates due process and other aspects of human rights, it is technically legal under the 2016 law reforms. The return to more aggressive methods of combating gang activity also corresponded with an increase in extrajudicial killings. The 2016 law reforms did not grant PNC officers the power to legally execute suspects; however, officers avoid consequences for extrajudicial activities due to a combination of a weak judicial system and support from Mano Dura policies.[citation needed]

Controversy and corruption

The homicide rate dropped from 105/100,000 in 2015[2] to 60/100,000 in 2017,[23] however this drop came with an uptick in accusations of PNC officers abusing their power. One of the most significant issue with the PNC’s use of force is the increase in reports of extrajudicial executions. In September 2018 the Inter-American Commission on Human Rights (IACHR) received reports of the PNC using extrajudicial killings to curb gang activity from the Human Rights Institute of José Simeón Cañas Central American University and the NGO Passionist Social Service.[24] By August 2017, the ratio of presumed gang members to PNC officers killed in confrontations was 73 to 1; the IACHR asserts that the ratio demonstrates an abuse of force by the PNC.[20] Early in 2018 the PNC shut down an elite police unit after it was accused of police brutality via extrajudicial execution of suspected gang members. Over the course of six months the Special Reaction Forces (FES) killed 43 gang members, causing people to question the legality of the PNC Unit’s actions.[25] Following the closure of the FES, the PNC created a new elite police unit with essentially the same responsibilities and jurisdiction as the FES called the Jaguars. Despite facing charges of extrajudicial killings, former members of the FES were allowed to join the Jaguars.[25] In another example, a text conversation between PNC officers, leaked by an anonymous officer, discusses strategies for hiding executions; effectively demonstrating the presence of illegal practices within the PNC.[25]

A UN report by Agnes Callamard states that the vast majority of officers under investigation (about 92%) are back on duty within 3 days.[25] In 2016 the Director General of the PNC, Mauricio Landaverde, stated that “All members of the PNC that have to use weapons against criminals due to their work as officers should do so with complete confidence. The PNC and the government will protect them”.[22] Landaverde, in this case, seemingly promotes the use of extralegal action and promises not to hold officers accountable for potential abuses of power. In one case, a Judge established that at least one of eight people killed during a shootout in San Blas was the victim of an illegal execution at the hands of the police. However, because the prosecution could not identify which specific officer was directly responsible for the execution, all charges against the eight PNC officers on trial were dropped.[20]

See also

References

  1. ^ Article 159 of the Constitution of El Salvador (1983) Archived 2015-01-03 at the Wayback Machine.
  2. ^ a b c d e f g h i Wade, Christine (2018). Latin American Politics and Development. New York: Westview Press. pp. 395–409. ISBN 978-0813350509.
  3. ^ a b Holland, Alisha C. (2013-04-19). "Right on Crime?: Conservative Party Politics and Mano Dura Policies in El Salvador". Latin American Research Review. 48 (1): 44–67. doi:10.1353/lar.2013.0009. ISSN 1542-4278. S2CID 154950225. Archived from the original on 2018-11-24. Retrieved 2018-11-23.
  4. ^ El Salvador: efforts to satisfy national civilian police equipment needs : report to the Honorable Alan Cranston, U.S. Senate, General Accounting Office, 1992
  5. ^ "AID TO EL SALVADOR : Slow Progress in Developing a National Civilian Police" (PDF). Archive.geo.gov. Archived (PDF) from the original on 26 January 2017. Retrieved 16 October 2017.
  6. ^ "U.S. SECURITY (Senate - March 05, 1992)". Fas.org. p. S2874. Archived from the original on 13 October 2016. Retrieved 16 October 2017.
  7. ^ Mary Katayanagi, Human rights functions of United Nations peacekeeping operations, p. 77
  8. ^ "Policia Nacional Civil". PNC. Archived from the original on November 24, 2018. Retrieved October 10, 2018.
  9. ^ "Director General". Policia Nacional Civil. Archived from the original on November 24, 2018. Retrieved October 10, 2018.
  10. ^ "Más de 9.000 pandilleros detenidos en El Salvador en 15 días, dice Bukele". France 24. 10 April 2022. Archived from the original on 21 April 2022. Retrieved 21 April 2022.
  11. ^ "El Salvador declares state of emergency after gang killings". www.aljazeera.com. Archived from the original on 5 April 2022. Retrieved 21 April 2022.
  12. ^ Guzmán, Jessica (25 July 2023). "Así Procesarán a los 71,976 Detenidos en el Régimen de Excepción" [This Is How They Will Process the 71,976 Detained in the State of Exception]. El Mundo (in Spanish). Archived from the original on 25 July 2023. Retrieved 8 August 2022.
  13. ^ a b c d e f g h i Refugees, United Nations High Commissioner for. "Refworld | El Salvador: The organizational structure of the National Civil Police (Policía Nacional Civil, PNC)". Refworld. Archived from the original on 2018-11-24. Retrieved 2018-10-20.
  14. ^ a b "Organizational Structure of the National Civil Police". Policia Nacional Civil. Archived from the original on November 24, 2018. Retrieved October 10, 2018.
  15. ^ a b c d e f g h i j k l m n "Latin American Light Weapons National Inventories". Fas.org. Archived from the original on 2016-03-15. Retrieved 2014-08-26.
  16. ^ "El Rifle Maxim Defense PDX en El Salvador". Retrieved 29 June 2023.
  17. ^ Renteria, Nelson. "El Salvador's gang truce cuts murder rate". U.S. Archived from the original on 2018-11-24. Retrieved 2018-11-23.
  18. ^ a b Archibold, Randal C. "In El Salvador, Violence Falls Amid a Gang Truce". Archived from the original on 2018-11-24. Retrieved 2018-11-23.
  19. ^ "El Salvador Throws Out Gang Truce and Officials Who Put It in Place". Archived from the original on 2018-11-24. Retrieved 2018-11-23.
  20. ^ a b c "Amid Rising Violence, El Salvador Fails to Address Reports of Extrajudicial Killings - WOLA". www.wola.org. Archived from the original on 2018-09-22. Retrieved 2018-10-20.
  21. ^ "El Salvador". www.state.gov. Retrieved 2018-10-20.
  22. ^ a b "Four Questions and Observations about El Salvador's Deteriorating Security Situation". Wilson Center. 2015-12-15. Archived from the original on 2018-11-24. Retrieved 2018-10-20.
  23. ^ "InSight Crime's 2017 Homicide Round-Up". InSight Crime. 2018-01-19. Archived from the original on 2018-10-06. Retrieved 2018-10-20.
  24. ^ "El Salvador 2017/2018". www.amnesty.org. Archived from the original on 2018-11-02. Retrieved 2018-10-20.
  25. ^ a b c d "US-funded police linked to illegal executions in El Salvador". Archived from the original on 2018-08-23. Retrieved 2018-10-20.