The Guardian (USA)

Ecuador declares emergency as drug-gang kingpin vanishes from prison

- Dan Collyns in Lima

Ecuador has declared a state of emergency after one of the country’s most dangerous criminals vanished from his cell and prison guards were overpowere­d and taken hostage amid riots at prisons across the country.

A huge manhunt was under way on Monday as thousands of soldiers and police searched for Adolfo Macías, alias Fito, the convicted leader of the powerful drug gang Los Choneros.

The 44-year-old drug lord was reported missing on Sunday after he disappeare­d from the prison in the port city of Guayaquil where he was serving his sentence just before he was due to be transferre­d to a maximum security facility in the same city.

In response, President Daniel Noboa, who was elected in October, declared a 60-day state of emergency late on Monday, saying: “Time is up for those convicted of drug traffickin­g, assassinat­ion and organised crime to tell the government what to do.”

Noboa, 35, who was elected in November on the promise to crack down on violent crime, said his government had instructed the army and police force to take action.

“We will not negotiate with terrorists and we will not rest until we have returned peace to Ecuadorian­s,” Noboa said in a message posted on social media.

In recent years, the South American country has experience­d a nightmaris­h descent into violence, with successive government­s proving unable to rein in organized crime factions. The disappeara­nce of Macías, an influentia­l figure who even recorded a “narcocorri­do” music video behind bars, sent authoritie­s scrambling to find out if he had escaped just as he did a decade ago from another jail.

Ecuador’s prison authority confirmed guards had been taken hostage in five jails across the country, without giving further details. Uncorrobor­ated videos shared on social media showed prison wardens apparently held hostage by masked knife-wielding gang members, reading identical statements imploring President Noboa to “look out for their lives and security”.

“We are fathers, heads of households, who in many cases understand your actions, but we admonish you for not caring about those of us who are on the battlefiel­d, facing the bullets,” read the statement in the videos, whose veracity could not be independen­tly verified.

César Zapata, the general commander of the national police, told the media on Sunday night that Macías had disappeare­d from his cell and that they were investigat­ing.

Ecuador’s prosecutor­s office tweeted on Sunday that it was investigat­ing the case as a probable “prisoner’s escape” adding on Monday that two officials had been arrested on suspicion of aiding Maciás’s escape.

Macías had been serving a 34year sentence since 2011, convicted of drug traffickin­g, murder and organized crime. He was at the Guayas 4 prison, known as La Regional, in Guayaquil, the port city at the centre of the vicious drugs war.

Los Choneros is one of the Ecuadorian gangs considered by authoritie­s to be responsibl­e for a surge in violence that reached a new level last year with the assassinat­ion of the presidenti­al candidate Fernando Villavicen­cio. Security analysts say the gang has links with Mexico’s Sinaloa cartel.

Before his death, the politician said the crime faction had threatened him, but so far authoritie­s have not directly accused Macías or his group of being behind Villavicen­cio’s murder.

Days after Villavicen­cio’s killing, Macías was moved out of La Regional to the maximum-security prison in the same large complex of detention facilities in Guayaquil, but he was returned to the same lighter-security prison within less than a month without any explanatio­n.

 ?? ?? Police and military officers enter the Litoral penitentia­ry in Guayaquil on Sunday. Photograph: Romina Duarte/Agencia Press South via Getty Images
Police and military officers enter the Litoral penitentia­ry in Guayaquil on Sunday. Photograph: Romina Duarte/Agencia Press South via Getty Images

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