El Salvador arrests ex-defense minister for making pact with gangs

Former defense minister David Munguia Payes handcuffed after the Attorney General's Office (FGR) ordered his capture for alleged crimes of illegal groups - AFP
Former defense minister David Munguia Payes handcuffed after the Attorney General's Office (FGR) ordered his capture for alleged crimes of illegal groups - AFP

El Salvador has arrested its former defense minister and put out a warrant for the country’s former president, over their alleged historic involvement in a pact with crime gangs.

According to prosecutors, David Munguia and Mauricio Funes, the former Salvadoran president, organised a pact between two rival gangs - Mara Salvatrucha and Barrio 18 - in order to reduce the number of homicides between 2012 and 2014, in exchange for providing undisclosed benefits to the criminal organisations.

National police arrested Mr Munguia at his home Thursday.

Investigators say they determined it was Mr Funes and Mr Munguia who conceived of and implemented the pact.

Mr Funes, who governed from 2009-2014 before seeking political asylum in Nicaragua in 2016, is also facing prosecution in five separate court cases.

Mr Funes claimed in a post on Twitter he had not authorised the truce between the gangs or given them money.

El Salvador's former Minister of Defense David Munguia Payes speaks during a news conference at the National Congress in San Salvador - Reuters
El Salvador's former Minister of Defense David Munguia Payes speaks during a news conference at the National Congress in San Salvador - Reuters

"I never met with gangsters and nor did I order any official to do so," Mr Funes wrote on Twitter. "I never ordered nor authorised prison privileges for any gang member."

Manuel Chacon, a lawyer for Mr Munguia, said there was not enough proof to warrant an arrest of his client.

When Mr Munguia was previously called to testify in another case related to the pact, he said that it was public policy born in Mr Funes' security cabinet.

"My role was to facilitate the work of the mediators and receive reports from the mediators and members of the (Organisation of American States) and keep the President of Republic informed of advances in the process," Mr Munguia said.

During the pact, daily homicides dropped from about 14 to five. But the pact dissolved in September 2013 after the Supreme Court removed Mr Munguia from his position and new authorities withdrew the privileges that imprisoned gang leaders had received. Homicides then rose again.

Manuel Chacon, his lawyer, said he will ask a judge to allow his client to not be held in jail while awaiting trial, because he is more than 70 years old and has sufficient familial and work ties to keep him from being a flight risk.