The bodies were still warm when the counting began. Thirty-one men dead, some dangling from improvised nooses, others blue from asphyxiation, as gunfire echoed through Machala’s prison and explosions carved the night open. Tactical units arrived too late, stepping into corridors slick with blood and smoke. Families waited outside, clutching names, begging for news that never cam…
Inside Ecuador’s prisons, the bars no longer separate criminals from society; they separate the state from its own authority. Machala is not an anomaly but a symptom of a system hollowed out and handed over to gangs who run drug routes, levy taxes on fear, and decide who lives or dies in overcrowded blocks.
The government speaks of “reorganization,” yet every transfer is a match tossed into a room soaked with gasoline. President Daniel Noboa promises iron-fisted control, but armored vehicles and press conferences cannot answer the mothers standing outside the gates, gripping photocopied ID cards. For them, the question is brutally simple: is he alive, or is he on a slab of steel? Until Ecuador wrests back its prisons from the cartels that govern them, every new crackdown risks becoming just another prelude to mourning.