اردو
  • Gunmen in Ecuador storm TV studio in wave of violence

    The armed gang took control of the TV station in Guayaquil while it was on air. Photo: international media The armed gang took control of the TV station in Guayaquil while it was on air.

    A live broadcast by Ecuadorean television station TC was interrupted by a group of armed people who forced staff to lie and sit on the floor, as shots and yelling were heard. The country’s president has declared 22 gangs as terrorist organisations and said that the country is in a state of “internal armed conflict”.

    The people, wearing balaclavas and largely dressed in black, were seen wielding large guns and accosting huddled staffers on the live feed, which eventually cut out on Tuesday. It is unclear if any station personnel were injured.

    Some of the invaders gestured at the camera and someone could be heard yelling “no police”.

    Another channel showed images of police outside TC’s studios in Guayaquil, a coastal city that has been plagued by surging violence over the last several years as narcotrafficking groups step up operations in the once relatively peaceful South American nation.

    “I am still in shock” Alina Manrique, the head of news for TC Television who says she had a gun pointed to her head during the incident, told reporters.

    “Everything has collapsed. All I know is that its time to leave this country and go very far away.”

    Ecuador’s national police said on social media that its specialised units had been deployed to the site, and police confirmed that 13 arrests had been made. The national police posted images of several men with their hands zip-tied behind their backs, stating that they were captured in their intervention at the studio.

    The incident came after at least seven police officers were kidnapped, explosions occurred in several cities and prison inmates seized dozens of guards as hostages, a day after President Daniel Noboa declared a state of emergency.

    Noboa issued a decree on Tuesday stating that the country was in a state of “internal armed conflict” and declaring 22 gangs as terrorist organisations. The decree ordered the armed forces to “neutralize” the groups, in line with international law and human rights.