Home Foreign News Ecuador: Prison inmates release guards and police after 57 taken hostage |...

Ecuador: Prison inmates release guards and police after 57 taken hostage | World News

Call us


Dozens of guards and police have been released after a series of hostage situations in Ecuador’s prisons.

The officers were held for more than a day in what the government described as a response by criminal groups to its efforts to regain control of several large correctional facilities in the South American country.

The 50 guards and seven police officers were held hostage in six different prisons but are now safe, the organisation responsible for prisons in Ecuador said.

It is not clear how they were released.

It comes after criminal groups used explosives to damage a bridge on Friday, the latest in a series of attacks this week.

A police officer stands near the remains of a car, that according to authorities was loaded with two gas tanks and later exploded when suspects set it on fire, seemingly targeting Ecuador's prison agency SNAI, in Quito, Ecuador August 31, 2023. REUTERS/Karen Toro
Image:
The remains of a car that authorities say was loaded with two gas tanks and later exploded

Read more:
Ecuador party of slain presidential candidate picks replacement
Hundreds escape jail after gang fight leaves 43 dead

Government officials have described the violent acts as the work of criminal gangs with members in prisons responding to efforts by authorities to retake control of several facilities by relocating inmates, seizing weapons and other steps.

Four car bombs and three explosive devices went off across the country in less than 48 hours, with two bridges targeted.

Please use Chrome browser for a more accessible video player

Moments before Ecuadorian candidate killed

Security analyst Daniel Ponton said the chain of events, which took place three weeks after the slaying of presidential candidate Fernando Villavicencio, was a “systematic and clearly planned” attack that had shown the state was ineffective in preventing violence.



Source link