El Salvador said on Saturday it had detained four former soldiers
accused of killing six Jesuit priests during the country's civil war,
and would keep searching for 12 other suspects who remain at large.
In January, the government said it would help arrest former soldiers
linked to the 1989 killings after a Spanish judge sent a new petition
for the soldiers' arrest to the international police agency Interpol.
The four were captured in a Friday night operation.
Another member of
the group is facing extradition to Spain from the United States.
Prosecutors say Salvadoran soldiers shot the priests at their home at
a university to silence their criticism of rights abuses committed by
the U.S.-backed army during the 1980-1992 civil war, which claimed an
estimated 75,000 lives.
Spain's High Court ruled in 2011 that the ex-soldiers should be tried
for the killings and ordered them arrested. Interpol also said the men
were wanted for extradition. But El Salvador's Supreme Court ruled at
the time that Interpol had required the soldiers be located but not
arrested or extradited.
The crime is one of the most emblematic of the armed conflict that
pitted the then-leftist guerrillas and now ruling party Farabundo Marti
National Liberation Front (FMLN) against the Salvadoran army.
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