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Is the Sinaloa Cartel Feeding Ecuador’s Domestic Drug Trade?
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Gradually, and with trepidation, life in Guayaquil is beginning to return. Few residents have fully recovered from the shock - from the outright chaos and bloodshed - of this week, a moment which will live long in the city's collective memory. But Dina Moreno can't afford to stay home any longer. She sells mobile phone accessories at Guayaquil's biggest covered market and, like many of her fellow stallholders, has ventured out to open her business and get back to work. Behind her, as she talks, Dina's seven-year-old son plays with some mobile phone covers. Schools in the city remain closed after the explosion of gang violence. Such was her loss of income from two days with no sales, Dina had no choice but to bring him to work. It's a similar story elsewhere in the sprawling market, as street food vendors, delivery boys and a preacher reciting Bible verses bring back the noise and bustle which has been absent since the attack. The spectre of the drug-gang violence remains, though. One vendor, Jorge, told me that the stall owners were all watching out for each other under the market's huge white awnings, keeping an eye out for the first sign of more trouble or the return of armed men to the streets. But while the small businesses of Guayaquil may be trying to get back to some form of normality, it's far from business as usual for Andres. His brother is among the prison staff - most of them guards - still being held hostage by the gangs. They're the only ones who have told us that our relatives are OK,' he tells me from outside the Ambato prison, where he's spent hours waiting for news. The police will only tell the desperate family members that they're waiting for orders to enter the prison. Andres says they haven't seen any movement from them in days. He adds that the guards had warned that something bad was going to happen in the prison, but the authorities didn't listen. The government insists that the country is now engaged in a war with the gangs and cannot back down in the face of intimidation, from either inside or outside the prisons. That is of little comfort to Andres though, who accuses the government of negligence and of forgetting about his brother. Amid the chaos, the most brazen act of gang violence was in the TC television studio in Guayaquil when armed men took staff hostage, brandishing weapons at the journalists live on air. In the ensuing ordeal, presenter Jose Luis Calderon could be seen urging the gang members to stay calm, even while they pointed a shotgun at his head and placed a stick of dynamite in his breast-pocket. Jose Luis described how he hid in a bathroom with a several colleagues when they heard yelling and gunfire. But their hiding place was soon discovered, and they were hauled out to join the other staff on set, at gunpoint. Hundreds of gang members have now been detained by the police. While the streets of Guayaquil are empty during the night-time curfew, by day they're getting busier as people come and go about their normal business. As the days pass from the most terrifying experience in its modern history, it is beginning to look like Ecuador is returning to normality. The risk is that it is actually hurtling towards an entrenched armed conflict, and moving ever closer to becoming a full 'narco-state'. Skip to content. US Election. Ecuador city tries to return to normal after gang horror. Getty Images. In the most dramatic attack, a group of armed men forced their way into a television studio. Dina had to reopen her stall to try and recover from two days without any income. Watch: Armed men interrupt live broadcast and threaten presenter contains distressing scenes. How Ecuador descended into gang violence. Ecuador president defies gangs to take on the army.
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