[ad_1] Inmates in six prisons have taken 57 prison guards and police officers hostage in Ecuador, as a wave of attacks rock the capital city of Quit
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Inmates in six prisons have taken 57 prison guards and police officers hostage in Ecuador, as a wave of attacks rock the capital city of Quito.
The prison uprising, which began on Thursday, is believed to be a riposte to a police sweep of jails to confiscate weapons the day before.
It follows other attacks in the city including the detonation of two car bombs, which targeted the violence-hobbled country’s SNAI prisons authority — one exploding outside its headquarters and the other at a building that formerly housed SNAI offices.
Hours later, SNAI said prisoners in six penitentiaries across the country had managed to seize 50 prison guards and seven police officers who were being held hostage.
“We are concerned about the safety of our officials,” said Interior Minister Juan Zapata at a press conference in the capital Quito.
In a video shared on social media, local journalist Christian Sanchez Mendieta said inmates had reached the roof of Turi prison, near the city of Cuenca, on Thursday afternoon.
The country, until a few years ago a peaceful haven nestled between the world’s largest cocaine producers — Colombia and Peru — has recently descended into violence as it has itself become a hub for drug trafficking.
Ecuador’s prisons have been the location of massacres by rival gangs with links to Colombian and Mexican cartels that have led to more than 430 inmate deaths since 2021, often leaving a trail of burned and dismembered bodies.
The police’s anti-drug investigations boss, General Pablo Ramirez, told reporters one of the rigged cars, a sedan, had been loaded with “two gas cylinders with fuel, a slow fuse and apparently dynamite sticks.” Firefighters said there were no injuries.
“There are violent actions like that of the two cars burned in Quito last night, clearly that’s a reaction to an action. The action of imposing order in the prisons, the reaction to intimidate,” said President Guillermo Lasso, according to Reuters.
Quito Mayor Pabel Munoz said the night also saw three grenade explosions in the city.
Six people, including a Colombian national, were arrested near the scene of one of these explosions, according to Ramirez.
All have a criminal history of extortion, robbery and murder, he said.
“Three of them were arrested 15 days ago for the theft of a truck and extortive kidnappings … and were released” under conditions, Ramirez said.
‘Intimidate the state’
Such attacks are rare in Quito, but reminiscent of the terror sown in Colombia by drug lord Pablo Escobar in the 1980s when he declared war on the state to prevent his extradition to the United States.
Ramirez said an inmate transfer earlier on Wednesday, aimed at preventing gang clashes, may have been the trigger.
Furthermore, hundreds of police and soldiers on Wednesday raided a prison in the southern city of Latacunga, searching for weapons, ammunition and explosives.
In apparent protest, inmates in Cuenca — hundreds of kilometres away — and jails in five other unnamed locations took dozens of prison guards hostage.
“They want to intimidate the state to prevent us from continuing to fulfil the role of the armed forces and the police in controlling these penitentiary centres,” Security Minister Wagner Bravo told FM Mundo radio.
President Guillermo Lasso in July decreed a 60-day state of emergency for the country’s prisons, allowing the deployment of soldiers to control the penitentiary system.
Drug gangs, which use prisons as operations centres, also face off in the streets of Ecuador, where the homicide rate rose to a record 26 per 100,000 inhabitants in 2022, almost double the previous year and higher than the rates in Colombia, Mexico or Brazil.
The violence spilt over into the political sphere earlier this month, with anti-corruption presidential candidate Fernando Villavicencio assassinated in Quito.
The Ecuadorean city most affected by the violence to date has been Guayaquil in the southwest, whose port is key to the fast-expanding drug trade to Europe and the United States.
Apart from gruesome prison clashes, Guayaquil has also seen car bombs, dismembered bodies hanged from bridges, kidnappings and extortion.
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