Gunmen storm TV station in Ecuador live on air after state of emergency declared

Armed militia stormed onto a live television set in Ecuador, carrying shotguns, pistols and homemade bombs after the country’s president issued a decree declaring 22 gangs as terrorist organizations.

The broadcast by station TC in the city of Guayaquil was quickly cut short on Tuesday after the gunmen forced staff onto the floor in footage beamed to thousands of homes.

The terrified host was seen praying to the camera as a shotgun was held to his head, while other attackers showed off grenades and sticks of dynamite to the audience. The group shouted that they had bombs as what sounded like gunshots were heard in the background.

The masked men stormed the studio before the feed was cut

(REUTERS)

The newspaper El Universo said reporters on the interrupted El noticiero news programme messaged groups begging for help. One read: “They want to kill the lot of us. Help us.” The channel broadcast live for at least 15 minutes before the signal was cut off. While the transmission was someone was heard yelling “Don’t shoot!”

Alina Manrique, the head of news for TC Television, said she was in the control room, across from the studio, when the group of masked men entered the building. One of the men pointed a gun at her head and told her to get on the floor, Manrique said.

“I am still in shock,” Ms Manrique said in a phone interview. “Everything has collapsed …. All I know is that it’s time to leave this country and go very far away.”

Suspects handcuffed at the TC television studio after police arrived

(X/Ecuador Police)

Some of the assailants ran from the studio and tried to hide elsewhere in the building when they realized they were surrounded by police, she said.

Half an hour after the gang stormed onto the set, police entered the building and later announced a number of arrests had been made. Police in Guayaquil later confirmed 13 arrests, and police social media posts showed photos of young men lying on the floor with their hands zip-tied behind their backs.

Ecuador Police said on X they had managed to release the hostages though it was not immediately clear if there were any injuries. Local media outlets have also reported armed factions entering the Maldonado Hospital and the University of Guayaquil.

Inmates stand on the top of Turi jail during a prisoner riot in Cuenca

(AP)

The incident followed the kidnappings of at least seven police officers and a series of explosions, a day after Noboa declared a state of emergency.

President Daniel Noboa issued a 60-day state of emergency on Monday, after a convicted gang leader disappeared from his prison cell, giving authorities the ability to suspend rights and mobilise the military in places like prisons.

The crisis developed after the leader of Los Choneros gang Adolfo Macías, known as“Fito” vanished from his cell, with authorities unable to find him or explain his disappearance. Ecuador’s prosecutors office tweeted Monday that it had filed charges against two prison guards as part of the investigation into the case which it is considering a “prisoner’s escape.”

An Ecuadorean police helicopter flies over the TC television studio

(AFP via Getty Images)

Los Choneros is one of the Ecuadorian gangs considered by authorities as responsible for a spike in violence over the past years that reached a new level last year with the assassination of the presidential candidate Fernando Villavicencio. The gang has links with Mexico’s Sinaloa cartel, according to authorities.

The politician had said that the criminal group led by Fito threatened him, but so far authorities haven’t directly accused Macías or his group of being behind Villavicencio’s murder.

Los Choneros and other similar groups linked to Mexican and Colombian cartels are fighting over drug trafficking routes and control of territory, including from within detention facilities, where at least 400 inmates have died since 2021, according to authorities.

Experts and authorities have acknowledged that gang members practically rule from inside the prisons, and Macías is believed to have kept controlling his group from within the detention facility.

President Noboa, an heir to a fortune built on the banana trade, took over in November saying his government’s main objective is to reduce violence.

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