• Monitoring: What is going on in Ecuador?

  • Feb 5 2024
  • Length: 28 mins
  • Podcast

Monitoring: What is going on in Ecuador?

  • Summary

  • At the start of the year masked gunman burst into a television studio in Guayaquil, Ecuador. The cameras were live and the entire event was broadcast. The video shows gang members shouting at staff, pushing them to the ground, threatening them with guns and explosives. These pictures subsequently travelled around the world.

    But this event was just one in a series to hit Ecuador in a short space of time. Car bombs, kidnappings, murder, prison riots, prominent prisoner escapes, and another national state of emergency.

    Criminal violence has washed over the country as competing gangs like Los Choneros and Los Lobos battle in prisons and on the streets over control of the lucrative cocaine trafficking business. Foreign organized criminal actors like the Mexican Sinaloa and Jalisco New Generation Cartels, the Albanian Mafia, FARC dissident groups from Colombia, and others, are all active in Ecuador, a country described as a "cocaine superhighway".

    In the space of just five or so years, Ecuador has gone from one of the safest countries in Latin America to a country with one of the highest murder rates. In this episode we are going to talk about how this happened.

    Speaker(s):

    Felipe Botero Escobar, the Head of Andean Programmes at the Global Initiative against Transnational Organized Crime

    GI-TOC:

    (Paper) Organized crime declares war: The road to chaos in Ecuador

    (Blog) Fernando Villavicencio - Assassination Witness Project

    The Global Organized Crime Index - Ecuador Country Profile

    (Paper) Transnational Tentacles: Global Hotspots of Balkan Organized Crime

    (Podcast episode) The Index - Ecuador

    (Paper) The cocaine pipeline to Europe

    Additional...

    Show More Show Less

What listeners say about Monitoring: What is going on in Ecuador?

Average Customer Ratings

Reviews - Please select the tabs below to change the source of reviews.

In the spirit of reconciliation, Audible acknowledges the Traditional Custodians of country throughout Australia and their connections to land, sea and community. We pay our respect to their elders past and present and extend that respect to all Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander peoples today.