Ecuador: Gang-ruled prisons, assassinated politicians and a drug lord's killing

A mass hostage taking in Ecuador's gang-ruled prisons and the assassination of a politician are the newest bloody episodes in a rustic gripped by the cocaine commerce.

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The South American nation has descended into violence lately, with the federal government proven to be weak within the face of more and more brutal drug cartels.

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Earlier this week inmates in six different prisons took dozens of guards and police hostage for greater than a day, whereas outdoors the partitions explosions went off throughout the nation.

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The 50 guards and 7 officers had been ultimately let go and had been reported to be secure - however the circumstances below which they had been launched are unclear.

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The authorities believes members of prison gangs contained in the prisons carried out the violence in response to efforts to take again management of a number of jails - relocating inmates and seizing weapons.

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Authorities have additionally pointed to an influence vacuum created by the killing of a druglord generally known as Rasquina three years in the past as pouring gasoline on the fireplace, however specialists say the issue goes again a lot additional...

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'A wave of retaliation that ended up claiming his life'

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Security analyst Daniel Ponton believes this week's violence is meant to generate worry among the many inhabitants - and affect politics.

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He stated the assaults had been "systematic and clearly planned" and confirmed the state was ineffective at stopping violence.

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Ecuador is ready to elect a brand new president in a run-off vote subsequent month, but one of the prominent candidates was assassinated before the first round.

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Fernando Villavicencio had made clear he was prepared to problem organised crime - and had a plan to do it.

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The former journalist had proposed militarising Ecuador's ports and taking again management of the prisons, Will Freeman, a political scientist on the Council on Foreign Relations thinktank, advised Sky News.

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"In a sense his proposals set off a wave of retaliation that ended up claiming his life," Mr Freeman stated.

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Mr Villavicencio had accused the Los Choneros cartel and its imprisoned chief, Adolfo Macias, of threatening him and his marketing campaign workforce days earlier than the assassination.

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Competition over drug routes by Ecuador

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Ecuador is a "drug trafficker's paradise" sandwiched between the world's two largest producers of coca (the plant from which cocaine is derived), Mr Freeman says.

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Amounts of cocaine seized within the nation - which notably don't embody the quantity that evades authorities - have skyrocketed lately.

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The nationwide foreign money is {dollars} which makes it preferrred for cartels eager to launder cash, he added.

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"Narcotrafficking didn't begin yesterday in Ecuador," he stated. "It's being going on since the '90s, 2000s."

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But he says it was below the management of the Revolutionary Armed Forces of Colombia (FARC), who had a monopoly.

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But when FARC laid down their weapons as a part of a peace settlement in 2016, issues modified.

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Since then, management over the drug routes throughout the Ecuador-Colombia border has been a contest amongst a number of teams, Dr Annette Idler, an affiliate professor of worldwide safety on the University of Oxford, advised Sky News.

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Mexican drug cartels, current in Ecuador for the reason that Nineties, have additionally taken benefit of the state of affairs, she stated.

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She added: "Another factor is domestic groups that are the ones we've seen involved in the prison violence, they've become more professionalised.

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"There's a whole lot of competitors over drug trafficking routes that go from Colombia by way of Ecuador to the US and that then has led to these unprecedented ranges of violence within the nation."

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Death of a drug lord

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Ecuadorian authorities have suggested that some of the recent violence stems from the power vacuum created by the assassination of Jorge Luis Zambrano, the leader of Los Choneros.

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Asked if this was the case, both Mr Freeman and Dr Idler said it played a role but was part of a much bigger picture.

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Zambrano, known by his nickname Rasquina, led the cartel as it took over much of the drug trade left by the demobilisation of FARC.

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Mr Freeman stated: "When he was taken out there began to be more intense fighting between Los Choneros and their rivals, and also within Los Choneros among mid-level commanders for control of the organisation - fighting which continues to this day."

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"That explains some of the violence", Dr Idler advised Sky News. But she added: "It's just a smaller piece of a much larger picture, which is much more about the geopolitical landscape and the security landscape that is about the cocaine.

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"So it is way more about understanding how these several types of illicit flows, the cocaine flows, the weapons which are being trafficked... how they're shaping the methods by which several types of teams attempt to have management over the territory."

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Asked what the answer is to the disaster, Dr Idler says the issue can't be solved by Ecuador alone.

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Instead, she says, it must be a regional strategy with funding in improvement, sustainability and constructing capability throughout a number of international locations.

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