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Women and LGBTQ people caught up in El Salvador’s state of emergency

Government’s anti-gang measures are threatening the innocent, vulnerable and marginalised, say human rights groups

Women and LGBTQ people caught up in El Salvador’s state of emergency
Salvadoran army commandos in front of the National Palace in El Salvador soon after a state of emergency was declared due to record-level gang violence, March 2022 | Hugh Mitton / Alamy Stock Photo
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Keiry Molina’s world turned upside down last May when a police officer arrived at her home in San Salvador, the capital of El Salvador.

The 46-year-old trans woman was arrested and taken to a police station, where she discovered that four anonymous tipsters had accused her of extortion and involvement with the country’s notorious criminal gangs.

Molina is a hairdresser, who is well known in the community as an animal rights activist who spent her free time rescuing stray dogs. Her family lives in a poor neighbourhood in Soyapango on the outskirts of the capital, has no ties to any gangs and was shocked by the allegations of extortion, says Molina’s niece Sofía.