Kuwait Times

Drug crimes keep Ecuador community in grip of fear

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DURAN, Ecuador: When Luis Sarmiento and his grandson went out early to buy bread one morning in March, they came across a shocking scene: A macabre message left by Ecuador’s drug trafficker­s in the form of two headless bodies.

“I covered my grandson’s eyes, went upstairs, and I don’t know anything else,” recalled Sarmiento, a 78year-old former laborer who has lived in the Duran municipali­ty-near Guayaquil, Ecuador’s largest cityfor 16 years. Drug trafficker­s have long targeted this hilly area to groom young recruits at their “school of assassins,” a retired police chief told AFP under condition of anonymity.

The cartels recruit children as young as 10 to sell drugs. “First they sell, then they give them a weapon and convert them into killers,” said police colonel Jorge Hadathy. At a hideout used by the Los Lagartos gang-one of Duran’s cartels-police found a collection of cuddly stuffed crocodiles.

They believe gangs use toys to attract children, particular­ly ones that allude to the criminal group-Los Lagartos means “the lizards” in Spanish. The majority of the 230 people arrested in Duran between January and April of this year were aged 17 or 18, said Hadathy. The group, he said, was responsibl­e for “four or five deaths.”

The Cerro Las Cabras hill where Sarmiento lives has a reputation for violence in Duran. In February,

two dead bodies that had been shot were found hanging from a pedestrian bridge. And another five mutilated bodies appeared between October and when the two decapitate­d ones showed up in March. The killings are believed to be linked to cruel score-settling in the style of Mexican mafias.

The murders are part of battles between rival micro-traffickin­g gangs, who move around $1.8 million a month in Duran alone, according to official figures.

‘Playing cat and mouse’

About 30 police officers search vehicles for drugs and weapons along the sloping side of the Cerro Las Cabras hill. Inside the community, when police on horseback seize a man in a cap, residents follow events out of the corner of their eyes, but don’t leave their homes or talk openly about what they have seen.

The traditiona­l mafia code of silence reigns. In their most recent incursion into the community, the police received support from the military for their operation.

Three of Ecuador’s provinces, including Guayas, where Duran is located, are under a state of emergency as the government looks to tackle gangs.

“The gangs are playing cat and mouse with us,” said Sergeant Washington Reyes. The cartels employ the use “bell-ringers”-children who use radios the size of a lighter to alert the mafiosos to police movements. The whole place is “a drug supermarke­t,” says Hadathy. “Families live off sales or receive money from the mafias, and the rest keep quiet out of fear.” Teenagers are easy prey for drug trafficker­s, said Duran community leader Alexandra Saavedra. “If they don’t have places to play sports and live in a depressed place, of course they will join a gang,” she said. “Sometimes a wolf is not bad out of desire, but because it has no options.”

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