She Exposed Government Abuse. Now She's Locked Up in an El Salvador Prison [View all]
From El Salvador to South Sudan, inside Americas global prison pipeline.
LATE SUNDAY NIGHT, police in El Salvador arrested one of President Nayib Bukeles sharpest critics, Ruth Eleonora López, an anti-corruption attorney who has spent years exposing government abuses. [She] is one of the strongest voices in defense of democracy, says Noah Bullock, her colleague and the executive director of Cristosal, a human rights group operating in northern Central America, including El Salvador.
López, a university professor and former elections official, heads Cristosals anti-corruption unit. She has also been an outspoken critic of Bukeles crackdown on gang violence that has resulted in arbitrary detentions, human rights violations, and the imprisonment of people not connected to gangs, according to Cristosal.
The organization has documented widespread abuses in the countrys prison system. Theres a clear pattern of physical abuse, and on top of that, a clear pattern of systematic denial of basic necessities like food, water, bathrooms, medicine medical care in general, says Bullock. Those two factors have combined to cause the deaths of at least 380 people in custody in recent years. Thats a prison system thats been contracted by the U.S. government, Bullock adds.
This week on The Intercept Briefing, Bullock speaks to host Jessica Washington about Lópezs continued imprisonment and what her work and detention reveals about the Trump administrations interest in El Salvadors prison system. Facing vague corruption charges, López has seen her family and lawyer but not yet a judge.
https://theintercept.com/2025/05/23/podcast-el-salvador-cecot-prison-bukele-trump-immigrants
Article contains a list of countries this admin is negotiating with to ship immigrants to their prisons.