AT least eight people have been killed and three others injured after gunmen opened fire inside a nightclub in Ecuador.
Armed thugs on motorbikes and pickup trucks swarmed the club after midnight and began shooting people drinking outside the venue in Santa Lucia.
AFPMilitary and police on duty (stock picture)[/caption]
AFPEcuador is now the deadliest country in Latin America[/caption]
Law enforcement arrived on the scene following an emergency call.
They found “several people wounded and seven bodies,” police colonel Javier Chango said.
Among the dead was the nightclub owner Jorge Urquizo, who was the brother of Santa Lucia’s mayor.
Police found 800 cartridge cases at the scene.
After the attack, the gunmen fled along an “unknown route,” Chango said.
The local police picked up a man driving a truck who was carrying a revolver, but were not able to determine whether he was involved in the attack.
Authorities said they have yet to work out a motive for the shooting.
Once peaceful, Ecuador has seen violence erupt in recent years as gangs with ties to Mexican and Colombian cartels vie for control.
More than 70 per cent of all cocaine produced in the world now passes through Ecuador’s ports, according to government data.
In 2023 alone, the country saw more than 8,000 deaths, an eightfold rise compared to 2018, putting it above other nations famed for their cartel violence such as Mexico and Colombia.
And a new record for the most killings in a single month was broken in January, with 781 killings.
After a series of riots saw the gangs take control of prisons, rival factions have waged bitter warfare against each other, carrying out brutal medieval-style executions and hanging bodies from bridges to mark their territory and terrify rivals.
Despite attempts by the country’s government and armed forces to crack down on the cartels, Ecuador remains the world’s number one exporter of cocaine.
Many of the shootings are carried out in a display of dominance, terrifying rivals and keeping local residents subdued.
Gangs such as Los Tiguerones, Los Lobos, and Los Choneros have even resorted to gruesome tactics such as cutting out the hearts of captured rivals and showing off the killings on social media.
Other victims may find themselves being hanged from bridges, their limp bodies serving as a warning to anyone entering the cartel’s territory.
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