Ecuador police arrest gang members who stormed hospital

9 months ago 38
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Suspects were made to lie down in the street in their underwearImage source, Ecuador police

Image caption,

Police released a video of the suspects as they were made to lie in the street stripped to their underwear

By Vanessa Buschschlüter

BBC News

Ecuadorean security forces have arrested 68 gang members after they stormed a hospital in the town of Yaguachi, in Guayas province.

Officials said the men tried to take over the facility, at which a member of their gang was receiving treatment.

Police said the intruders' aim was to guard the patient from potential attacks from rivals.

There have been previous incidents in which gang members have been targeted while in hospital.

During that incident, nurses and hospital staff were taken hostage as the men exchanged fire with police.

It is not yet clear which gang was behind Sunday's storming of the Yaguachi hospital, nor who the injured man was they were trying to guard.

Police said he had arrived at the hospital in the early hours of Sunday with gunshot wounds. He has since died of those wounds, they said.

After securing the hospital, the security forces also raided a nearby "rehabilitation centre".

Drug rehabilitation centres are often used as a front by gangs. Officials said this one was used as command centre for their illegal operations, as well as a brothel.

The raid comes amid a state of emergency declared by President Daniel Noboa in response to a surge in gang violence.

More than 2,700 suspects have been arrested since Mr Noboa declared war on the gangs on 9 January, saying that there was an "armed internal conflict" between the criminal groups and security forces.

The president took the unprecedented step as gunmen took journalists and staff at a TV station hostage during a live broadcast.

Media caption,

Watch: Armed men interrupt live Ecuador broadcast and threaten staff

Since then, soldiers have been deployed to help police quell the violence, which had spread from the country's prisons to the streets of Ecuador's major cities.

According to the government, 201 prison guards and staff, who had been held hostage by rioting inmates, have been freed.

But the gangs also appear to have stepped up their attacks.

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