Berliner Boersenzeitung - From Freddy Kruegers to Peaky Blinders: a look at Ecuador's drug gangs

EUR -
AED 4.105457
AFN 78.708047
ALL 98.292443
AMD 432.83919
ANG 2.0004
AOA 1024.970235
ARS 1274.808036
AUD 1.744952
AWG 2.014731
AZN 1.896656
BAM 1.958239
BBD 2.26412
BDT 136.249727
BGN 1.961332
BHD 0.422727
BIF 3336.756615
BMD 1.117742
BND 1.456114
BOB 7.748653
BRL 6.330112
BSD 1.121397
BTN 95.867423
BWP 15.16389
BYN 3.669771
BYR 21907.750599
BZD 2.252506
CAD 1.561575
CDF 3209.037956
CHF 0.935415
CLF 0.027448
CLP 1053.312116
CNY 8.058365
CNH 8.060214
COP 4710.567979
CRC 568.00757
CUC 1.117742
CUP 29.620173
CVE 110.402529
CZK 24.911681
DJF 199.688753
DKK 7.461389
DOP 65.992207
DZD 149.055679
EGP 55.942131
ERN 16.766136
ETB 151.387885
FJD 2.540968
FKP 0.841554
GBP 0.841991
GEL 3.062171
GGP 0.841554
GHS 13.905322
GIP 0.841554
GMD 81.03544
GNF 9711.097164
GTQ 8.609725
GYD 234.612258
HKD 8.734318
HNL 29.178348
HRK 7.542548
HTG 146.732786
HUF 402.863402
IDR 18436.32221
ILS 3.976312
IMP 0.841554
INR 95.665502
IQD 1469.029978
IRR 47070.921587
ISK 146.077759
JEP 0.841554
JMD 178.762686
JOD 0.792813
JPY 162.406293
KES 144.940553
KGS 97.746833
KHR 4487.590214
KMF 493.48529
KPW 1005.96819
KRW 1563.855624
KWD 0.343583
KYD 0.934564
KZT 571.752235
LAK 24252.211106
LBP 100474.962184
LKR 335.537981
LRD 224.269374
LSL 20.243117
LTL 3.300403
LVL 0.676111
LYD 6.186707
MAD 10.403159
MDL 19.534334
MGA 5026.26124
MKD 61.606744
MMK 2346.904629
MNT 3994.555761
MOP 9.026645
MRU 44.38429
MUR 51.539073
MVR 17.279777
MWK 1944.422177
MXN 21.755173
MYR 4.801868
MZN 71.422887
NAD 20.243117
NGN 1791.003148
NIO 41.2614
NOK 11.607028
NPR 153.388076
NZD 1.899793
OMR 0.430046
PAB 1.121397
PEN 4.13435
PGK 4.660806
PHP 62.37394
PKR 315.778367
PLN 4.279553
PYG 8953.152989
QAR 4.087191
RON 5.119299
RSD 117.376216
RUB 90.519629
RWF 1605.800354
SAR 4.191797
SBD 9.322451
SCR 15.94266
SDG 671.207755
SEK 10.913726
SGD 1.452992
SHP 0.87837
SLE 25.372644
SLL 23438.499024
SOS 640.89837
SRD 40.888696
STD 23135.010501
SVC 9.812223
SYP 14532.720506
SZL 20.248223
THB 37.300738
TJS 11.561302
TMT 3.917687
TND 3.381012
TOP 2.617866
TRY 43.353125
TTD 7.606475
TWD 33.775497
TZS 3024.868094
UAH 46.548185
UGX 4103.111267
USD 1.117742
UYU 46.658122
UZS 14539.111447
VES 105.29829
VND 28973.559038
VUV 135.383499
WST 3.105678
XAF 656.775148
XAG 0.034609
XAU 0.000349
XCD 3.020755
XDR 0.816818
XOF 656.775148
XPF 119.331742
YER 272.844128
ZAR 20.203178
ZMK 10061.020748
ZMW 30.142549
ZWL 359.91259
  • CMSD

    0.0472

    22.06

    +0.21%

  • CMSC

    -0.0500

    22.05

    -0.23%

  • AZN

    0.8500

    68.81

    +1.24%

  • NGG

    1.2500

    71.28

    +1.75%

  • SCS

    0.0000

    10.5

    0%

  • RBGPF

    64.5000

    64.5

    +100%

  • GSK

    0.4991

    37.64

    +1.33%

  • BTI

    1.2700

    42.64

    +2.98%

  • BP

    0.1300

    29.76

    +0.44%

  • RELX

    0.5300

    54.57

    +0.97%

  • VOD

    0.1800

    9.45

    +1.9%

  • RIO

    -0.1100

    62.64

    -0.18%

  • JRI

    0.1600

    12.9

    +1.24%

  • BCC

    0.9200

    91.91

    +1%

  • BCE

    -0.0700

    21.56

    -0.32%

  • RYCEF

    0.0200

    10.72

    +0.19%

From Freddy Kruegers to Peaky Blinders: a look at Ecuador's drug gangs
From Freddy Kruegers to Peaky Blinders: a look at Ecuador's drug gangs / Photo: Rodrigo BUENDIA - AFP

From Freddy Kruegers to Peaky Blinders: a look at Ecuador's drug gangs

Ecuadorans go to the polls on Sunday under the shadow of surging drug violence and a troubling explosion in the number of local gangs and mafias.

Text size:

A flood of cocaine from Colombia and Peru through Ecuadoran ports has drawn a who's who of mafias from Albania to Italy to Mexico to this once-safe Andean nation.

But it has also created a plethora of homegrown groups with striking names and ferocious reputations.

"Los Freddy Kruegers" cause nightmares in the streets, "The Ugly Women's Headquarters" run jails and "The Peaky Blinders" try to rule the waves of a key coastal zone.

Together they and numerous other groups terrorise citizens through campaigns of extortion, kidnap and murder.

In January and February, Ecuador recorded more than one death every hour, according to figures from the Interior Ministry.

The mafias "have been gaining space; it is complex to combat them," admits Guayaquil's police commander, Pablo Davila.

The situation has put security at the center of Sunday's presidential runoff between incumbent Daniel Noboa and leftist candidate Luisa Gonzalez.

One merchant remembers the day a bomb exploded in her restaurant in Guayaquil, the economic and crime capital of the country.

"They said they were from the mafia. They demanded $15,000 not to kill us," the woman, who asked not to be named for her safety, told AFP.

Many local gangs have teamed up with much larger cartels from Mexico and Colombia, as well as Albanian and Italian mafias.

But the local gangs have also fractured and proliferated as they look for their own ever-bigger piece of the pie.

"The war is over territory. There aren't known leaders like before. Everyone wants their independence," said the head of one gang on condition of anonymity.

The situation is causing serious headaches for Ecuadoran security services, who must now gather intelligence and act against an ever-changing panoply of actors.

Security expert Carla Alvarez compares the situation to the chaos of 1990s Colombia.

"We see an association of small, less rigid groups. This already happened in Colombia in the 1990s after the death of Pablo Escobar," she said.

In Ecuador, hierarchies began to break in 2018 when one of the largest organizations split.

The death of "Choneros" leader Jorge Luis Zambrano in 2020 left a power vacuum.

The impact is now felt even in relatively safe Quito, once a haven from drug violence, but increasingly on the front lines.

There, restaurant employee Marianela receives threats and extortion via WhatsApp. "I block them," she said.

But there is no ignoring the violence on the streets of her Martha Bucaram neighborhood.

Police and military regularly appear, hunting for weapons and drugs. "There were about two dead here on the corner," she said, recalling a recent shootout.

Carolina Andrade, a municipal security secretary, admits that without the security presence of hard-hit Guayaquil, the capital is seen as "a safe space to come and hide."

As new alliances and actors emerge, there may be worse to come.

Multiple smaller gangs are now trying to join "larger organizations to have greater presence, legitimacy, and territorial control," Andrade said.

(B.Hartmann--BBZ)