Ecuador recovering remains after prison violence, death toll unclear | Inquirer News

Ecuador recovering remains after prison violence, death toll unclear

/ 08:48 AM July 27, 2023

Ecuador recovering remains after prison violence

Relatives of inmates wait for news about their loved ones outside the prison in Guayaquil, after Ecuador’s government on Tuesday declared a 60-day state of emergency throughout the country’s prisons and authorized armed forces to retake control of jails, following a wave of violence that left 18 dead over the weekend, in Guayaquil, Ecuador July 25, 2023. REUTERS

QUITO — Ecuador’s police said on Wednesday they had recovered 11 bodies and 29 body parts after retaking control of various cell-blocks at a prison in Guayaquil where members of different criminal groups fought over the weekend.

The forensic effort at the Penitenciaria del Litoral prison is continuing to determine the official death toll, Cesar Zapata, the police director of citizen security and public order told journalists.

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The figure seemed to contradict that given on Tuesday by the country’s attorney general’s office, which tallied 31 prisoner deaths.

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“We are carrying out a collection and verification of the exterior and interior to be able to determine exactly how many bodies there are,” said Zapata, who added authorities were confirming whether the body parts belonged to already-recovered remains.

This week’s latest surge of prison violence comes during campaigning for Aug. 20 elections, with some presidential candidates pledging prison reforms.

Seventeen prison guards held hostage at a jail in the city of Esmeraldas have been released, the government said in a statement on Wednesday afternoon, adding it was continuing efforts to keep the facilities under control.

More than 100 prison officers held in jails around the country were freed on Tuesday, and SNAI said prisoners had lifted hunger strikes held at some facilities.

The 2,700 soldiers and police officers who entered the Penitenciaria del Litoral prison confiscated high-caliber weapons including grenade launchers, drugs, cell phones and bullet-proof vests.

The disturbances led President Guillermo Lasso to declare a 60-day state of emergency for the country’s prisons and allow the military to help retake control.

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Lasso has regularly declared states of emergency in the country’s prisons as he tries to tackle violence that has surged since 2021, claiming the lives of at least 400 prisoners.

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TAGS: Ecuador, Prison, Riot

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