Berliner Boersenzeitung - Ecuador journalists under fire as drug war escalates

EUR -
AED 3.873253
AFN 71.500988
ALL 98.146886
AMD 411.697238
ANG 1.894923
AOA 960.637148
ARS 1062.914198
AUD 1.623755
AWG 1.898113
AZN 1.795451
BAM 1.953405
BBD 2.122937
BDT 125.645966
BGN 1.956338
BHD 0.397486
BIF 3106.233047
BMD 1.054507
BND 1.412029
BOB 7.266127
BRL 6.293832
BSD 1.051481
BTN 88.779583
BWP 14.364118
BYN 3.440884
BYR 20668.341959
BZD 2.119342
CAD 1.477679
CDF 3026.43589
CHF 0.932288
CLF 0.037351
CLP 1030.622996
CNY 7.645601
CNH 7.65267
COP 4624.309522
CRC 537.031449
CUC 1.054507
CUP 27.944442
CVE 110.130509
CZK 25.270847
DJF 187.235135
DKK 7.45855
DOP 63.381097
DZD 140.851579
EGP 52.409956
ERN 15.817609
ETB 132.901051
FJD 2.393418
FKP 0.83234
GBP 0.833419
GEL 2.884051
GGP 0.83234
GHS 16.350033
GIP 0.83234
GMD 74.870149
GNF 9060.7203
GTQ 8.112094
GYD 219.98136
HKD 8.207072
HNL 26.592894
HRK 7.522073
HTG 137.897024
HUF 413.771244
IDR 16730.653739
ILS 3.851586
IMP 0.83234
INR 89.105282
IQD 1377.372246
IRR 44368.392346
ISK 144.710032
JEP 0.83234
JMD 166.083243
JOD 0.747967
JPY 160.167522
KES 136.82254
KGS 91.531609
KHR 4230.693086
KMF 491.924885
KPW 949.056119
KRW 1471.776676
KWD 0.324263
KYD 0.876201
KZT 528.437137
LAK 23087.039983
LBP 94156.09209
LKR 305.959111
LRD 188.205703
LSL 19.076371
LTL 3.113686
LVL 0.63786
LYD 5.144547
MAD 10.535234
MDL 19.256845
MGA 4919.828645
MKD 61.532797
MMK 3424.998391
MNT 3583.215554
MOP 8.425931
MRU 41.798964
MUR 49.108421
MVR 16.292494
MWK 1823.212991
MXN 21.412476
MYR 4.688316
MZN 67.383869
NAD 19.076552
NGN 1779.111701
NIO 38.691832
NOK 11.703006
NPR 142.045514
NZD 1.790658
OMR 0.405964
PAB 1.051511
PEN 3.957448
PGK 4.239722
PHP 61.920447
PKR 292.160789
PLN 4.306497
PYG 8218.690605
QAR 3.83242
RON 4.976647
RSD 116.990166
RUB 117.698321
RWF 1448.796392
SAR 3.96107
SBD 8.847938
SCR 14.874397
SDG 634.284883
SEK 11.533225
SGD 1.416841
SHP 0.83234
SLE 23.929466
SLL 22112.494623
SOS 600.951874
SRD 37.319539
STD 21826.170885
SVC 9.200459
SYP 2649.480933
SZL 19.073256
THB 36.334636
TJS 11.276655
TMT 3.70132
TND 3.31605
TOP 2.469762
TRY 36.520773
TTD 7.137115
TWD 34.344206
TZS 2788.497826
UAH 43.777486
UGX 3880.261451
USD 1.054507
UYU 45.064967
UZS 13509.310356
VES 49.333724
VND 26747.576214
VUV 125.193219
WST 2.943753
XAF 655.141414
XAG 0.03517
XAU 0.000399
XCD 2.849858
XDR 0.804291
XOF 655.135209
XPF 119.331742
YER 263.547718
ZAR 19.238093
ZMK 9491.827502
ZMW 28.678027
ZWL 339.550902
  • RIO

    0.2900

    62.32

    +0.47%

  • CMSC

    -0.0500

    24.52

    -0.2%

  • NGG

    0.5000

    63.33

    +0.79%

  • RYCEF

    0.1100

    6.91

    +1.59%

  • RBGPF

    1.0000

    62

    +1.61%

  • RELX

    0.2400

    47.05

    +0.51%

  • VOD

    0.1100

    8.97

    +1.23%

  • SCS

    -0.0700

    13.47

    -0.52%

  • BTI

    0.2300

    37.94

    +0.61%

  • BCC

    -2.0100

    146.4

    -1.37%

  • BCE

    0.3900

    27.02

    +1.44%

  • CMSD

    -0.0700

    24.36

    -0.29%

  • AZN

    0.8400

    67.2

    +1.25%

  • GSK

    0.3100

    34.33

    +0.9%

  • JRI

    0.1700

    13.41

    +1.27%

  • BP

    0.1700

    29.13

    +0.58%

Ecuador journalists under fire as drug war escalates
Ecuador journalists under fire as drug war escalates / Photo: Rodrigo BUENDIA - AFP

Ecuador journalists under fire as drug war escalates

To do their work of reporting the news -- a crucial job ahead of Sunday's looming presidential election -- many journalists in Ecuador now don bulletproof vests and helmets.

Text size:

Theirs is not a country at war in the traditional sense, but one caught up in a bloody battle nonetheless -- between rival drug gangs.

Long a peaceful haven between major cocaine exporters Colombia and Peru, the South American nation has exploded in violence in recent years as enemy gangs massacre hundreds in prisons, hang headless bodies from city bridges and detonate car bombs in the streets.

As the conflict between groups with links to Mexican and Colombian cartels has escalated -- with the country's murder rate quadrupling in four years -- three reporters were among the fatalities in 2022, according to NGOs.

Fifteen have received death threats so far this year.

In August, Fernando Villavicencio --a journalist-turned-presidential candidate with a history of speaking out against the cartels -- was assassinated in broad daylight while on the campaign trail.

"It is not easy to do our work with what we are going through," said a reporter in the port city of Guayaquil, at the center of the violence. The journalist had received threats and asked not to be identified.

What is happening in Ecuador today "we had only ever seen in Mexico, and is something very foreign from our reality," said the reporter, who moved homes after becoming anxious that criminals were zoning in on his whereabouts.

Five Ecuadoran reporters are living as refugees abroad.

- 'Growing hostility' -

According to a recent report by Reporters Without Borders, "journalists in Ecuador work in a climate of growing hostility, physical danger and self-censorship, marked by an increase in the power of criminal gangs and drug cartels, as well as an increase in threats, physical attacks and even murders."

In Guayaquil, many reporters go to work in bulletproof vests and helmets, similar to their colleagues covering Russia's invasion of Ukraine or the Israeli-Palestinian conflict.

Coverage around the largest prison complex in Guayaquil is particularly risky. It has been the epicenter of prison clashes in which some 460 inmates have died since February 2021, many beheaded or burned to death.

As an added security measure, journalists have taken to providing fake personal information in bureaucratic procedures "so that organized crime, if it turns its attention to you, will find it a bit more difficult to locate you," said one.

The August 9 assassination of Villavicencio has fueled the fear.

The remaining presidential candidates, Luisa Gonzalez and Daniel Noboa, have reinforced their security, as have the journalists following their campaigns ahead of Sunday's run-off vote.

Prior to his death in a barrage of submachine gun fire, Villavicencio said he had received threats from "Los Choneros," a gang with links to Mexico's Sinaloa cartel and Colombia's Gulf Clan.

Many news outlets avoid reporting on these organizations for fear of becoming targets themselves.

Cesar Ricaurte of the Fundamedios press watchdog told AFP "the pattern of violence" in Ecuador has changed.

While in the past the threat came mainly from state actors -- such as corrupt politicians fearful of being exposed -- it now comes from "organized and common crime," he said.

- 'How toads die' -

In March, five envelopes with USB sticks loaded with explosives were delivered to journalists at different media outlets in Ecuador. One was slightly injured after a device detonated.

Last year, the TV station RTS came under gunfire, and in 2020 a device exploded on the premises of Teleamazonas.

"I’ve been wearing a vest and bulletproof helmet for a month-and-a-half," a photojournalist from Guayaquil told AFP, recounting warnings received while on duty in Duran, a town under gang control.

"They told me: 'watch out, this is how toads die... stop taking pictures, you don't know what you're getting into.'"

In Colombia, the Spanish word for toad, "sapo," is used to denote a snitch.

The Inter-American Commission on Human Rights has also expressed concern for reporters in Ecuador ahead of the election.

The "violence, threats, stigmatization and exile of journalists require extreme efforts to provide protection and guarantees to journalists," IACHR special rapporteur Pedro Vaca said on X, formerly Twitter.

(Y.Berger--BBZ)