Ecuador battles drug gangs behind surge of violence
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[January 11, 2024]
By Alexandra Valencia
QUITO (Reuters) - Ecuador's president has declared war on drugs gangs
holding scores of prison guards hostage in a wave of violence that saw
the storming of a TV station on-air and explosions around the nation.
The unrest appears to be in response to President Daniel Noboa's efforts
to tackle cocaine trafficking, in particular by putting gang leaders in
new high-security prisons.
"We are at war and we cannot cede in the face of these terrorist
groups," Noboa, the 36-year-old son of a banana baron in power since
November, said on Wednesday.
His government has declared a state of emergency, sent the military
after 22 gangs named as terrorist organizations, and said about 20,000
criminals are involved.
Since Monday, gangs have kidnapped more than 130 prison guards and
staff. That followed the apparent escape of notorious "Los Choneros"
gang leader Adolfo Macias from prison.
With unexplained blasts occurring in various cities, balaclava-clad
gunmen with grenades and dynamite briefly took over the TC broadcaster
in the Pacific Ocean port city Guayaquil on Tuesday during a news
program, before police arrested them and freed the media staff.
"It was surreal," said journalist Jose Luis Calderon, 47, who at one
point was obliged to appear on camera at gunpoint at the TV studio.
Calderon told Reuters that at first he hid in the bathroom with others,
but they were found and forced into the studio by the assailants. When
police gunshots were heard outside, some colleagues begged for their
lives.
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"The individuals shot their guns, I think in reaction to the police, and
they shot a door and one of the bullets ricocheted and injured the leg
of a cameraman," Calderon said.
HUNDREDS OF DETENTIONS
A colleague recounted how dozens of journalists cowered on the floor,
some praying. "I thought it was my last day on earth and I wouldn’t see
my children again," Alina Manrique said.
The armed forces commander, Rear Admiral Jaime Vela, told a news
conference late on Wednesday that 329 people, mostly from gangs
including Los Choneros, Los Lobos and Los Tiguerones, have been detained
since the state of emergency began this week.
In response to videos purporting to show prison staff being subjected to
extreme violence, including shooting and hanging, he said no hostage had
been killed.
Reuters could not immediately verify the videos.
Prisons agency SNAI said 125 guards and 14 administrative staff remain
hostages, with 11 people freed on Tuesday.
Police said nine officers were kidnapped in recent days, with three
still being held.
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![](../images/011124PIX/news_l5.jpg)
Police officers stand outside of El Inca prison amid the ongoing
wave of violence around the nation, in Quito, Ecuador January 10,
2024. REUTERS/Karen Toro
![](http://archives.lincolndailynews.com/2024/Jan/11/images/ads/current/atlantabank_lda_LUAL_2023.png)
Showing determination to press on with his security policies, Noboa
told Canela Radio a design for two new prison facilities would be
made public on Thursday.
The president said deportations of foreign prisoners, especially
Colombians who number 1,500 in Ecuador's jails, would begin this
week to ease overcrowding and costs.
"We are investing more on those 1,500 people than on school
breakfasts for our children," he said.
INTERNATIONAL ALARM
Ecuador borders cocaine-producing Colombia and Peru and has become a
major shipment point. Both its neighbors have stepped up controls on
their frontiers.
China, a major investor, has closed its embassy and consulates.
Washington has pledged aid, said Noboa, whose $800 million security
plan includes $200 million of weapons from the U.S.
Peru is investigating possible smuggling by its military of
explosives and grenades for Ecuador's gangs.
Ecuador's government says the oil and mining sectors are functioning
normally and has sent security forces to ports to protect exports
like fruit and cocoa.
Soldiers and police have been raiding homes, beefing up checkpoints,
and entering prisons.
"The challenge for Noboa will be to make lasting headway in the
fight against crime beyond any immediate-term, military-led
pacification," consulting firm Teneo said in a note.
Many businesses and schools have closed, with city streets quiet as
police and soldiers patrolled.
"It's a very cold environment, as if there were a new COVID," said
Guayaquil security guard Rodolfo Tuaz, 40.
"It's nerve-racking, we cannot work in these conditions," said
another resident, Gabriel Narvaez.
In anti-gang operations, five gang members were killed in Esmeraldas
province, national police commander General Cesar Zapata said,
without giving more details.
Police were also seeking to identify three bodies in a burned-out
car south of Guayaquil, and two officers were killed by armed men in
Guayas province where Guayaquil is located.
(Reporting by Alexandra Valencia in Quito; Additional reporting by
Herbert Villarraga in Guayaquil, Marco Aquino in Lima and Julia
Symmes Cobb and Luis Jaime Acosta in Bogota; Writing by Julia Symmes
Cobb and Andrew Cawthorne; Editing by Angus MacSwan)
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