This article needs to beupdated. The reason given is: Updates needed past June 2023. Please help update this article to reflect recent events or newly available information.(November 2023) |
| Honduran gang crackdown (2022–present) | |||
|---|---|---|---|
| Régimen de Excepción | |||
Xiomara Castro declaring the state of emergency | |||
| Date |
| ||
| Location | |||
| Status | Ongoing | ||
| Parties | |||
| |||
| Lead figures | |||
Uncentralized leadership | |||
| Casualties | |||
| Death | 100+[1][2][3] | ||
| Arrested | 652 (as of 3 February 2023)[4] | ||
TheHonduran gang crackdown, referred to inHonduras as theRégimen de Excepción (Spanish forState of Exception), began in December 2022 after parts of theconstitution were suspended to fight criminal gangs in the country.
Initially instituted for forty-five days in two municipalities,Tegucigalpa andSan Pedro Sula, the state of exception has been renewed and extended to more than half of the country's cities. The government strengthened police resources, built several high-security prisons, authorized the deployment of security forces in the streets, and authorized the deployment of military forces in the streets to support the police.
Thehomicide rate has fallen from 38 per 100,000 inhabitants in 2022 to 31 in 2023, a drop of 17%. However, according to some specialists, the reduction in crime is not directly linked to the state of emergency.[5]
On 24 November 2022, the government ofHonduras declared astate of emergency regarding gang violence in the country.[6] On 3 December 2022, the government announced that someconstitutional rights would be suspended in the cities ofTegucigalpa andSan Pedro Sula to crack down on criminal gangs in those two cities, particularlyMara Salvatrucha (MS-13) and18th Street Gang. In those cities, the gangs are accused ofextorting residents in exchange for protection from violence, and of killing people who refuse to pay. According to Association for a More Just Society, the gangs earn an estimated US$737 million per year through extortion.[7]Gustavo Sánchez, the commissioner of theNational Police, stated thestate of exception would persist for 30 days.[8]
Xiomara Castro, thepresident of Honduras, condemned the gangs' use of extortion, stating, "[Extortion] is one of the main causes of insecurity, migration, displacement, loss of freedom, violent deaths and the closure of small and medium-sized businesses. With the comprehensive strategy against extortion and related crimes announced today by the national police, this government ofdemocratic socialism declares war on extortion."[9] According to Leandro Osorio, the former commissioner of the National Police, the crackdown would "carry repressive actions" and would "penetrate" the gangs to capture their leaders. Raúl Pineda Alvarado, a Honduran security analyst, stated that the crackdown would be an "imitation" of asimilar gang crackdown inEl Salvador which began in March 2022.[10]
In more than half of the country's cities the government strengthened police resources, built several high-security prisons, authorized the deployment of security forces in the streets, and carried out arrests and searches without warrants.[citation needed]
The crackdown began on 6 December 2022 at 6:00 p.m. when 2,000 police officers entered areas controlled by the gangs in Tegucigalpa and San Pedro Sula.[8]
On 8 January 2023, Castro extended the state of exception by 45 days.[11][needs update] The state of Emergency was extended in 21 February 2023[12] and later in 8 April 2023.[13]
On 20 June, at least 46 womenwere killed in a riot at a women's prison in the town of Támara.[2] From June 24 to 25, thirteen people, 12 men, and 1 woman, were shot dead at a birthday party in the northern manufacturing city ofCholoma. At least 11 others were killed in separate incidents across the northern de Sula region in what are assumed to be drug-related killings. Following the incident, the government imposed an immediate 15-day curfew in Choloma between 9 pm and 4 am and another inSan Pedro Sula, effective 4 July.[3]

On 15 June 2024, Honduran President Xiomara Castro announced new measures to reduce gang activity in Honduras, including the construction of a 20,000-capacity "megaprison" and plans to designate gang members as terrorists.[14]
On 19 September, two inmates are killed while three others are injured in an attempted jailbreak at a men's prison inTámara.[15]