Ecuador | At least ten dead in clashes in a prison

(Quito) At least ten people were killed Friday in clashes between inmates in a prison in the Ecuadorian capital Quito, we learned from official sources.


“There are ten confirmed deaths” in Pichincha 1 prison, the prison administration (SNAI) said on WhatsApp.

A previous toll reported nine deaths.

The inmates killed, who do not have gun or knife wounds, were “apparently strangled”, Police General Victor Herrera told reporters.

The general in charge of security in Quito specified that the security forces had brought the situation under control.

The prosecutor’s office “will open an investigation,” the prosecution had previously announced on Twitter.

Images posted on social media showed a helicopter flying over the prison, located in the north of the capital.

This violence comes a few hours after the transfer by the prison authorities of a feared gang leader, named Bermudez, from this prison to another penitentiary center of high security, in the large port city of Guayaquil.

Another gang leader was also transferred the same day from another prison to Guayaquil.

Announcing in the morning this isolation measure aimed at those who seek to “create chaos”, Ecuadorian President Guillermo Lasso had released photos of the operation.

Detention centers across the country are the scene of recurring violence between rival gangs. Since February 2021, there have been eight massacres in these prisons and 400 inmates killed, most of them dismembered and burned.

The latest violence dates back to November 8, when eight inmates died in El Inca prison.

In early November, the government began transferring 2,400 detainees, triggering a violent offensive by criminal gangs linked to drug trafficking. These illegal groups carried out car bomb attacks near gas stations and police barracks and provoked shootings.

Eight people, including five police officers, died in these attacks in Guayaquil, a strategic port city for the transport of drugs to the United States and Europe, which has become a stronghold of rival drug trafficking mafias.


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