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The young teen was a victim of Venezuela's "megabandas", cartels that have emerged from overcrowded and violent prisons
A CHILLING video of a 13-year-old boy's brutal execution at the hands of a Venezuelan cartel is a blinding example of the violence gripping the south American nation.
An unseen man waves a machete over the shirtless boy, who is bound and gagged, before slicing off his ears.
It is virtually impossible to watch the rest of the video, seen by News.com.au , but it has been described as an execution by a drug cartel.
These violent gangs operating out of both Venezuela and Mexico kidnap their rivals, torture them, execute them and record their actions as a warning.
The young boy killed with a machete is believed to be the victim of one of Venezuela’s "megabandas", born out of the overcrowded, unregulated prison system.
One of the most violent prison systems in the world, with almost 6,500 murders committed in custody between 1999 and 2014, the jails ballooned in population, more than trebling in that time.
The megabandas govern large swathes of the country, carrying out drug trafficking, kidnapping and extortion.
They operate alongside the Venezuelan cocaine syndicate, the Cartel of the Suns, which smuggles the drug from Colombia to the US via the impoverished state of Apure.
From poor border towns along the rivers across stretches of prairie, megabandas are now the de facto law.
Just over two years ago, two West Australian surfers vanished in November 2015 while driving through Mexico.
The charred bodies of Adam Coleman and Dean Lucas, both 33, were found in their burnt out van on a gang-plagued rural road in Sinaloa state.
Drug kingpin Joaquin "El Chapo" Guzman, a fugitive at the time of the Australians’ murder but now back in custody, led the Sinaloa drug cartel.
The cartels of Tijuana, Juarez and the Gulf have been responsible for the deaths of tens of thousands of Mexicans. In a decade of drug violence, about 26,000 have gone missing.
Last year, Periodista Digital reported that Mexico was experiencing one of its worst moments in the field of drug trafficking, with authorities unable to keep up.
Mexican drug cartels, if viewed as a combined entity, control most of the cocaine entering the US via a number of trafficking routes.
A report last November by Insight Crime, an analysis group of Latin American organised crime, described Venezuela as "a key transit country" for drug shipments to the US and Europe.
The New York Times has reported previously that drug traffickers can "make an airstrip on the flat prairie in a few hours by dragging a log behind a pick-up truck to smooth the ground".
Insight Crime described the shared border as "a hub of criminal activity" for drugs, human trafficking and money laundering.
Sporadic looting, food riots and protests driven by the hungry poor have seen a recent surge in Venezuela, a country no stranger to unrest.
But the uprisings playing out recently have a different face to mostly middle-class protesters who took to the streets for months last year in political demonstrations trying to oust Maduro.
The surge in violent food protests began in poor neighbourhoods across the country around Christmas, when Maduro promised to distribute holiday hams to his supporters.
But many did not arrive, sparking protests with small groups burning garbage in the street and looting.
The unrest has cooled some, but many Venezuelans fear it will be a temporary lull as the economy spins further out of control.
The International Monetary Fund estimates inflation will reach five digits this year, while the economy, in its fifth straight year of recession, will shrink 15 percent.
Truckers hauling food from rice to live chickens have become targets while stopped in traffic or making a pit stop.
In the mid-2000s, drug syndicate Cartel of the Suns was formed, allegedly headed up by corrupt elements of the Venezuelan military.
The cartel and the Revolutionary Armed Forces of Colombia (FARC) recently turned the Venezuelan state of Apure into one of the world's busiest transit hubs for cocaine trafficking into the US.
Border towns along the Meta River, which shares part of the 2,200km Colombian-Venezuelan border, are caught up in the trade.
In 2013, three men from the Venezuelan National Guard were arrested for placing 31 suitcases containing 1.3 tons of cocaine on a flight from the capital Caracas to Paris.
In 2014, a commander for the Guard was stopped while driving to Valencia, Venezuela with his family with 554kg of cocaine in the vehicle.
And a year later, the two nephews of Venezuelas’s President Nicolas Maduro's wife were arrested by the US Drug Enforcement Agency in Haiti trying to negotiate the transport of 800kg of cocaine to New York.
But it remains an uphill battle, with criminal organisations from Colombia, Brazil and Europe as well as homegrown groups all operating in Venezuela.
Last September, Insight Crime reported that the power of megabanda prison gang leaders, known as “pranes”, has risen with these bosses overseeing a food and clothing network in the squalid jails.
This has expanded to alcohol, drugs, and prostitutes.
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https://www.thesun.co.uk/news/5510382/execution-video-venezuela-teenage-boy-machete-gang/
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