Bangkok Post

New riot erupts as prison war claims at least 79 lives

-

QUITO: Ecuador on Wednesday raised the death toll from riots in four jails to 79, including 18 prisoners who were found dismembere­d at one site, one of the bloodiest outbreaks of prison violence in the country’s history.

But even as authoritie­s said they had regained control following the initial riots, the head of Ecuador’s national police wrote on Twitter on Wednesday that a new mutiny in Guayaquil’s prison was under way.

Police and troops were stationed at detention centres in the cities of Guayaquil, Cuenca and Latacunga, where gangs on Tuesday fought one another with handmade weapons in what authoritie­s said was a coordinate­d outbreak of violence.

The gangs began a battle for leadership within the prison system in December when a leader of Los Choneros, considered the system’s most powerful gang, was killed in a shopping centre several months after being released.

Several of Tuesday’s confrontat­ions took place in maximum security areas of the Guayaquil and Cuenca prisons.

Prison authority SNAI said all those killed in the rioting were prisoners, with first reports citing 50 dead, before rising to 62 and to 79 in the latest report. A further dozen inmates and police were injured, according to official data.

“Thanks to the actions carried out between this institutio­n and the National Police, the situation ... is under control,” authoritie­s added in a statement.

But in the Twitter message on Wednesday saying that a new mutiny in Guayaquil’s prison was under way, the head of Ecuador’s national police said police were preparing to enter again “with necessary rational force”.

SNAI confirmed the new riot on Twitter and said its agents were coordinati­ng with Ecuador’s national police, but gave no further details.

Ecuador’s prosecutor’s office started an investigat­ion into the riots, saying in a statement it had found 18 dismembere­d bodies in one of the prisons.

Inmates’ relatives remained outside the prisons on Wednesday hoping for informatio­n about their loved ones.

In a televised address, President Lenin Moreno acknowledg­ed the prison system was overpopula­ted by around 30% and lacked sufficient funding and personnel.

The riots took place after authoritie­s dismantled cocaine processing laboratori­es and seized 128 tonnes of drugs in 2020, a record for the Andean country, Mr Moreno said.

“What happened yesterday is not causal, it was organised from outside the prisons and internally orchestrat­ed by those who dispute leadership and drug traffickin­g throughout the national territory,” Mr Moreno said. “What happened yesterday is not a coincidenc­e, it is a consequenc­e,” he said, adding he would seek internatio­nal help in his fight against organised crime.

 ?? REUTERS ?? Family members of inmates gather outside a prison as authoritie­s try to control another riot in Guayaquil, Ecuador on Wednesday.
REUTERS Family members of inmates gather outside a prison as authoritie­s try to control another riot in Guayaquil, Ecuador on Wednesday.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Thailand