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Gunshots on live TV as Ecuador gangsters vow 'war'
Gunshots rang out Tuesday on live TV in violence-torn Ecuador as armed men burst into a studio shortly after gangsters vowed a "war" against the president's plans to reclaim control from "narcoterrorists."
Attackers carrying rifles and grenades stormed the studio of TC television in the port city of Guayaquil as a woman was heard amid gunshots pleading: "Don't shoot, please don't shoot."
The intruders forced terrified crew onto the ground, and a person could be heard screaming in apparent pain as the studio lights went off but the live broadcast continued.
"Please, they came in to kill us. God don't let this happen. The criminals are on air," a TC employee told AFP in a WhatsApp message.
After about 30 minutes of chaos, officers were seen entering the studio while someone then called out that they "have a wounded companion."
Earlier Tuesday, gangsters kidnapped police officers and set off explosive in several cities in response to a 60-day state of emergency and nighttime curfew declared by brand-new President Daniel Noboa.
Noboa, 36, was elected in October on a pledge to fight rampant drug-related crime and violence in the South American country -- once considered a bastion of peace, but now a key stop on the US- and Europe-bound cocaine trade.
He vowed Monday to bring the fight to the cartels after a powerful gang leader, Jose Adolfo Macias, known as "Fito," escaped from prison the previous day.
On Tuesday, the gangs hit back.
Authorities reported multiple explosions and said seven police officers had been kidnapped.
They were taken in the coastal city of Machala, in the capital Quito, and in the southwestern province of Los Rios.
A chilling video circulating on social media showed three of the kidnapped officers sitting on the ground with a gun pointed at them as one is forced to read a statement addressed to Noboa.
"You declared war, you will get war," the clearly terrified officer reads. "You declared a state of emergency. We declare police, civilians and soldiers to be the spoils of war."
The statement added that anyone found on the street after 11:00 pm (0500 GMT) "will be executed."
The presidency and metro stations in Quito were under military guard on Tuesday.
Police say an explosive device was thrown near a police station in Esmeraldas on the northwest coast and two vehicles were burned in other areas, with no one killed or injured.
In Quito, a car was reportedly blown up, and a device exploded near a pedestrian bridge.
- 'Return peace to all Ecuadorans' -
A manhunt is under way for Fito, who had been serving a 34-year sentence for organized crime, drug trafficking and murder.
The 44-year-old leader of the powerful Los Choneros gang is believed to have been tipped off and escaped just hours before police arrived to conduct an inspection of the Guayaquil prison where he was held.
On Tuesday, officials said another narco boss -- Los Lobos leader Fabricio Colon Pico -- has also escaped since his arrest last Friday for alleged involvement in a plot to assassinate Ecuador's attorney general.
Unrest broke out Monday at penitentiaries in six of Ecuador's 24 provinces, according to Ecuador's prison authority SNAI, with guards taken hostage at some of the facilities.
Heavily armed police and soldiers entered the prisons of El Oro, Loja, Chimborazo, Cotopaxi, Azuay and Pichincha, after which the military distributed images of half-naked inmates rounded up in courtyards.
The SNAI has not revealed whether the guards have since been released.
Noboa, who took office in November, said the uprisings appeared to be revenge for his actions to "regain control" of the country's prisons.
On Monday, he vowed: "We will not negotiate with terrorists nor rest until we return peace to all Ecuadorans."
Last week, Noboa announced the country would construct two maximum security prisons -- similar to the one built by Salvadoran President Nayib Bukele in his war against gangs -- to hold the most dangerous criminals.
Long a peaceful haven sandwiched between top cocaine exporters Colombia and Peru, Ecuador has seen violence explode in recent years as enemy gangs with links to Mexican and Colombian cartels vie for control.
Drug violence has taken a heavy toll.
The murder rate quadrupled from 2018 to 2022, while last year became the most violent yet with more than 7,800 homicides in the country of about 17 million people and 220 tons of drugs seized, a new record.
Since February 2021, clashes between prisoners have left more than 460 dead, many beheaded or burnt alive.
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C.Bruderer--VB