The Scotsman

Ecuador TV station attack sparks war on gangs

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Ecuador has declared war on its criminal gangs after gunmen stormed a TV station during a live broadcast.

President Daniel Noboa, who took office late last year, said gangs should be “neutralise­d”, in his toughest crackdown yet, after masked men broke into public television channel TC’S live studio, injuring two employees. A total of 13 people were arrested following the incident, during which one gunman pointed a pump-action shotgun at the head of one of the members of staff during a 15-minute ordeal which was broadcast live.

A man with a pistol appeared in the middle of the live transmissi­on, followed by a second man with a shotgun, then a third and more.

The transmissi­on was after about 15 minutes.

The country is two days into a 60-day state of emergency, declared on Monday after an imprisoned leader of a drug gang mysterious­ly vanished from his cell in the coastal city of Guayaquil.

Los Choneros gang leader Adolfo Macias, alias Fito, had been serving a 36-year sentence for murder, drug traffickin­g and other crimes. Mr Noboa has previously promised to eradicate violence and fighting between drugs cartels through his so-called Phoenix Plan, details of which he has not revealed to the public.

The state of emergency tasked police and armed forces with enforcing compliance on restrictio­ns such as the rights to move freely, to assemble and allows police entry into homes without a court order.

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Ecuador’s National Police detaine suspects inside the studio of public television station TC afyer an attack which saw suspected gang members taking several journalist­s and staff members hostage

However, the attack on TC Television elicited another decree, this time recognisin­g the country possesses an armed, domestic conflict and identifyin­g more than a dozen organisati­ons as “terrorists and belligeren­t non-state actors”. These groups include the Choneros, Lobos, Tiguerones and Aguilas.

The decree also enabled the armed forces to carry out military operations “to neutralise the identified groups”, while observing internatio­nal humanitari­an law.

The recent surge in violence began in February 2021 with a massacre inside the country’s most violent prison, the Literol penitentia­ry.

It left at least 79 dead, and sparked a series of shocking episodes within Ecuadorian prisons. In September of the same year, the nation’s worst prison massacre saw 116 inmates killed in a single prison, with several of them beheaded, while a total 18 clashes inside prisons have killed more than 450 people.

According to authoritie­s, disputes between gangs inside the prisons prompted the death in December of 2020 of a Los Choneros leader, Jorge Luis Zambrano, alias Rasquina, in an attempt to usurp his power.

This generated divisions among local groups which are disputing territory to control drug distributi­on. Authoritie­s say some of the gangs have ties to Mexico’s Sinaloa and Jalisco New Generation cartels.

Violence within prisons has spread to the streets, with rampant kidnapping, murder, robbery and extortion that has made the country among the most violent in the region. Last year was Ecuador’s bloodiest in on record, with more than 7,600 murders.

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