The government is attempting to reform the Citizen Security Law, a controversial rule known as the 'gag law', created in 2015 to penalize dissent and citizen protests.
Despite the intentions of the opposition to repeal it over the past nine years, disagreements among left-wing parties and early elections have frustrated efforts.
The current law allows high fines for participants and organizers of unnotified protests, and confers a high degree of discretion to security forces.
Amnesty International and the Ombudsman have criticized the law, citing examples of how it criminalizes protest and have called for its reform.
Proposed changes include a review of the uses of rubber bullets by riot forces and hot returns.
Conclusion: Despite the remaining discrepancies, reformers should remember that partial reform is preferable to the absence of reform, given the law's restrictive effect on citizen protest and freedom of speech.