The screams started before dawn. Gunfire, explosions, bodies hanging in the dark. By sunrise, more than 30 inmates
were dead, dozens wounded, and a nation already on edge was plunged into fresh terror. Officials rushed to explain.
What unfolded in Machala was not an isolated burst of chaos but another chapter in a war that has turned Ecuador’s prisons into command centers
for organized crime. The reported asphyxiations and hangings hint at
calculated executions, not random mayhem, in a system where gangs decide who lives and
who dies long before the state reacts. Transfers to a new maximum-security facility may have been the spark,
but the fuel was years of ceding control to criminal structures that now operate with military discipline.
Outside, mothers and fathers wait behind cordons, clutching phones that do not ring, trapped between official
silence and whispered lists of the dead. Inside government offices, promises of reform collide
with the entrenched power of drug-trafficking networks that use overcrowded cellblocks
Machala will not be the last night the country wakes to gunfire behind prison walls.