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    El Salvador likely committed crimes against humanity during state of emergency, jurists say

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    March 10 (Reuters) - A ‌group of international jurists on Tuesday ​accused Salvadoran authorities of committing crimes against humanity in ⁠a report filed with the Inter-American Commission on Human Rights.

    The complaint alleges systematic acts of torture, ​murder, and forced disappearances under the country's controversial state ‌of exception, which the government of President Nayib Bukele imposed four years ago on March.

    * The report claims ⁠there are "reasonable grounds" tobelieve crimes against ⁠humanity, as defined by Article 7 of theRome Statute of the International Criminal Court (ICC), areoccurring. * It alleges the violations are part of a ‌state policy"known and even promoted by the highest levels ⁠of PresidentNayib Bukele's government." * President ‌Bukele's government first implemented the ​stateof exception on March 27, 2022, to combat a wave of gangviolence that left 87 people ‌dead in one weekend. * Under ​the emergency decree, authorities ⁠have detained over90,000 people, and approximately 500 ‌of those detainees havedied ⁠in state custody. * Homicides have fallen by more than 90% since Bukele tookoffice, according to government ​figures. * Salvadoran Public ‌Defender General Rene Escobar denied theclaims, saying the government ⁠rejects any policy of "forceddisappearance, ​torture, sexual violence, or arbitraryexecutions."

    (Reporting by Reuters, ​Editing by Natalia Siniawski)

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