2018 attacks on the northern border of Ecuador | |
---|---|
Location | Esmeraldas, Ecuador |
Date | January 27, 2018 - July 4, 2018 |
Weapons | Car bomb |
Deaths | 5 |
Perpetrators | Comité Base Mantaro Rojo Frente de Defensa de Luchas del Pueblo de Ecuador |
Motive | War on drugs in Ecuador |
Inquiries | 27 |
The attacks on the northern border of Ecuador in 2018 were a series of terrorist attacks that took place in the towns of San Lorenzo, Mataje and Viche in the Esmeraldas Province, Northern Ecuador. The attacks began on January 7, 2018, outside the facilities of the San Lorenzo National Police district where, in the early morning hours, a car bomb exploded leaving 28 people injured, as well as severe damage to the infrastructure of the police precinct and 37 homes in the vicinity. In preliminary investigations, Ecuadorian authorities linked this incident to criminal organizations linked to drug trafficking and the illegal drug trade.
In the days following the attack in San Lorenzo, several minor attacks began to be recorded. On March 22, another explosion occurred from a bombing located on the side of the San Lorenzo-Mataje highway, which caused the death of 3 marines, in addition to leaving 7 more injured. The crisis worsened on March 26 with the kidnapping and murders of journalists from El Comercio, who were covering a report on the events that were taking place in Mataje and its surroundings.
The kidnapping and subsequent murder of the journalists, as well as the responsibility for several of the attacks, have been attributed to the Oliver Sinisterra Front , a dissident group of the Daniel Aldana Mobile Column of the Revolutionary Armed Forces of Colombia (FARC), who refused to lay down their arms, refusing to accept the peace agreements between this guerrilla and the Colombian government, calling themselves an "active front", but Colombia does not call them an insurgent group but rather a criminal group, calling it a Residual Organized Armed Group (GAOR) .
It is believed by the government that it was not only the Oliver Sinesterra Front involved, but that the Mantaro Rojo Base Committee and the Defense Front of People's Struggles of Ecuador also participated.
On Saturday, January 27, 2018, at 01:40 in the morning, a car bomb exploded in the parking lot behind the headquarters building of the San Lorenzo District Police Command, in the San Lorenzo Canton, Esmeraldas Province, near the Colombia–Ecuador border. [1] The detonation affected the structure of the police precinct, destroying the rear wall and windows of the building where the dining room and bedrooms function; In addition, it affected 37 surrounding homes that were located within a radius of 50 metres. [2] [3] There were no fatalities, however, it left 28 people injured, of which 14 were police officers who were in the building.
January 27, 2018
- 01:40 — Car bomb explosion outside a police checkpoint in San Lorenzo
March 17, 2018
- 02:30 — Detonation of explosive material near a naval checkpoint in Borbón
March 18, 2018
- 09:00 approx. — Bursts of gunfire against soldiers in the El Pan sector.
- 09:40 — Detonation of an explosive device against a police vehicle in the Alto Tambo sector.
March 20, 2018
- — Detonation of explosive device against military vehicle in Mataje
The injured were immediately treated at the Divina Providencia hospital and at the health center in that town. [4] Due to their minor injuries, they were discharged around noon. The report on the material damage was given by Police Colonel Richard Carolys, while the evaluation and actions at the scene included the participation of military personnel from the Ecuadorian Navy.
President Lenín Moreno signed the same day the decree of state of exception valid for 60 days only with effect in the cantons of San Lorenzo and Eloy Alfaro in an attempt to strengthen security in the area. [5] The first theories about the attack postulated that the attack was carried out by criminal organizations linked to drug trafficking. [6]
First attacks on the Army
On February 19, 2018, two soldiers were injured in an attack with artisanal mortars by dissidents of the former FARC guerrilla against Ecuadorian soldiers in the Pan zone in Esmeraldas Province. The uniformed men suffered minor injuries. [7]
48 days after the attack in San Lorenzo, on Saturday, March 17, 2018, around 02:30 in the morning, another detonation was recorded near a naval checkpoint of the Ecuadorian Navy in the town of Borbón, in the Eloy Alfaro canton. [8] The explosive device was homemade and consisted of a cable that was connected at one end to a jute bag loaded with gunpowder, and the other end connected to an electricity meter of a church located 100 meters from the checkpoint [9] according to the respective police report. [9] There were no fatalities or serious injuries, but there was material damage to infrastructure. The explosion affected the surrounding area smashing the windows of the Fire Department building, the Parish Government, the communal house and other surrounding homes. Only three sailors were slightly injured after the attack and the collapse of part of the wall of that military post was reported. [10]
The attack occurred while an operation called "Libertador" was being carried out in several towns in the provinces of Esmeraldas and Guayas, which included the participation of 13 tax agents from the Office of the Attorney General of Colombia and elements from the Colombian Prosecutor's Office and from the United States, the Federal Bureau of Investigation ( FBI ). [11] Authorities considered that the objective of the attack was to create a distraction during the raids resulting from the operation. [12] After the operation, 20 homes were raided (18 in Esmeraldas, 2 in Guayas) and 5 people linked to Walter Patricio Arízala Vernaza (Alias Guacho) were arrested, [10] who was suspected of being responsible for the attack in San Lorenzo. [13]
After the attack in Borbón, on Sunday, March 18, two incidents occurred in the San Lorenzo canton. The first occurred in the town of El Pan, near the Colombian-Ecuadorian border, where Ecuadorian military personnel patrolling the area received an attack of gunfire coming from some homes. [14] The shots were fired from a rifle against the patrol that was transporting the soldiers and then they received a burst of mortars. As a result of the shooting, two soldiers received minor injuries from flying shrapnel. [15] On that same day, at approximately 9:30 in the morning, a second incident was also recorded through a detonation of a homemade explosive in a patrol car belonging to the UPC Alto Tambo in the El Pan parish, in the San Lorenzo canton. [16]
On Tuesday, March 20, 2018, there was a detonation of an explosive device placed on the San Lorenzo-Mataje highway, where military vehicles with Army troops were passing with the aim of continuing with the operations to control the situation.
On March 26, 2018, three workers from the newspaper El Comercio r, were kidnapped. They were 32 year old journalist Javier Ortega, 46 year old photographer Paúl Rivas and 60 year old driver Efraín Segarra. The team was working on reports about the violence that had occurred weeks before in that area.
The kidnapping occurred after passing the last military checkpoint in the town of Mataje, in Esmeraldas, a province in the region of the Colombia–Ecuador border. [17] [18]
On April 3, the Colombian network RCN broadcast a video of the three kidnapped Ecuadorians, in which journalist Javier Ortega said:
"Mr. President Lenín Moreno our lives are in your hands. The only thing they want is the exchange of their three detainees in Ecuador for our three lives to return safely to their families and, also the annulment of the terrorism agreement between Ecuador and Colombia.".
The video also mentioned that the perpetrators of the kidnapping was the group called the Oliver Sinisterra Front, led by the Ecuadorian Alias Guacho, a dissident of the demobilized Colombian FARC guerillas. [19] [20] [21]
On April 12, the RCN network received photographs of what were presumed to be the bodies of the three kidnapped people. [22] At first, the government authorities and the Ecuadorian president did not confirm the veracity of the photographs, giving them a period of 12 hours to provide evidence that the three captives were still alive.
On April 13, President Moreno confirmed the murder of the three Ecuadorians and announced a military operation against illegal groups in the border area with Colombia. [23] [24] Likewise, as a result of these events, the Ecuadorian president ordered the suspension of the peace talks in Quito between the Colombian government and the ELN guerrilla that were taking place in this country, also withdrawing as guarantor of the process. The bodies of the journalistic group were recovered in Ecuador on the Fuerza Pública de Colombia . On June 21, their identities were confirmed. For its part, the Ecuadorian government sent a note of protest to the Colombian government for the handling of information on Social media, bypassing the respective diplomatic channel. [25]
Shortly after the murder of the journalists, the National Secretariat of Communication of Ecuador issued a statement on Twitter in which it declared that two more people had been kidnapped. The couple were Ecuadorian nationals Oscar Efrén Villacís Gómez and Katty Vanesa Velasco Pinargote. This occired in the midst of joint military operations carried out by Ecuador and Colombia following the murder of the two journalists and their driver. President Lenin Moreno had given a statement on Monday declaring a period of 10 days to surrender and Ecuador put a reward of US$100,000 and calling the kidnappers "cowards because they use human shields to want to blackmail the Ecuadorian people." This was shocking because even during the most severe parts of the Colombian conflict, Ecuador had remained almost immune to the violence occurring on the other side of its northern border. On July 4, the Colombian Government confirmed that the two bodies found in the city of Tumaco, in the southwest of the country, later identified as the two kidnapped Ecuadorian citizens. Following this military operations in the border area were strengthened. Paradoxically, it was the signing of the peace agreements in Colombia in 2016 that seems to have changed the situation.
The first injured victims were recorded on January 7, 2018, after the first attack in San Lorenzo, where 28 people were affected, 14 of them being police officers who were in the police building. The injuries were minor and the vast majority were treated at the Divina Providencia Hospital and the San Lorenzo health center.
¡Alfaro Vive, Carajo! (AVC), another name for the Fuerzas Armadas Populares Eloy Alfaro, was a clandestine left-wing group in Ecuador, founded in 1982 and named after popular government leader and general Eloy Alfaro. The group was labeled as a terrorist organization by the Ecuadorian state during the period of the former president León Febres Cordero. It existed between 1983 and 1991, when it carried out various armed actions and criminal acts in Ecuador, with Colombian (M-19) and Nicaraguan influence. The group was initially formed sometime in the 1970s, but was not active militarily for the first few years of the 80's.
The Southern Bloc of the FARC-EP was the first bloc of the Revolutionary Armed Forces of Colombia to exist and is where the roots of the guerrilla movement lie. The bloc has been held responsible for several notorious attacks, including the infamous "donkey-bomb", numerous attacks against military bases, as well as Íngrid Betancourt´s kidnapping. It was also blamed by government investigators and prosecutors for the bombing of the El Nogal club. FARC itself denied that any of its members were responsible for the attack.
Rafael Vicente Correa Delgado is an Ecuadorian politician and economist who served as President of Ecuador from 2007 to 2017. The leader of the PAIS Alliance political movement from its foundation until 2017, Correa is a democratic socialist and his administration focused on the implementation of left-wing policies. Internationally, he served as president pro tempore of the UNASUR.
Luis Edgar Devia Silva, better known by his nom de guerreRaúl Reyes, was a leader, Secretariat member, spokesperson, and advisor to the Southern Bloc of the Revolutionary Armed Forces of Colombia–People's Army (FARC–EP). He died during an attack by the Colombian army 1.8 kilometres (1.1 mi) within Ecuador, sparking the 2008 Andean diplomatic crisis.
This is a timeline of events related to the Colombian armed conflict.
The 2008 Andean diplomatic crisis was a diplomatic stand-off between the South American countries of Ecuador, Colombia and Venezuela. It began with an incursion into Ecuadorian territory across the Putumayo River by the Colombian military on March 1, 2008, leading to the deaths of over twenty militants, including Raúl Reyes and sixteen other members of the Revolutionary Armed Forces of Colombia (FARC). This incursion led to increased tension between Colombia and Ecuador and the movement of Venezuelan and Ecuadorian troops to their borders with Colombia.
Colonel Carlos Concha Torres Airport is an airport serving the Pacific coastal city of Esmeraldas, capital of the Esmeraldas Province of Ecuador. It is 3 kilometres (1.9 mi) east of the city, across the Esmeraldas River in the parish of Tachina. Established in 1940 as General Rivadeneira Airport, the airport was renovated between 2012 and 2013, receiving a new terminal and a lengthened runway.
Operación Fénix, was an attack by the Colombian military against a camp of the guerrilla group the Revolutionary Armed Forces of Colombia (FARC) 1.8 kilometers (1.1 mi) over the border in Sucumbíos Province, Ecuador on March 1, 2008. The raid succeeded in killing Raúl Reyes, second-in-command of FARC, as well as some two dozen individuals present in the encampment, including an Ecuadorian citizen and four Mexicans, allegedly research students invited to the camp after attending a Bolivarian congress in Quito. In the aftermath of the attack, a diplomatic crisis emerged between Ecuador, Colombia, and Venezuela.
Guillermo Ayoví Erazo better known as Papá Roncón was an Afro-Ecuadorian musician, singer, and marimba player.
The insurgency in Paraguay, also known as the Paraguayan People's Army insurgency and the EPP rebellion, is an ongoing low-level armed conflict in northeastern Paraguay. Between 2005 and the summer of 2014, the EPP campaign resulted in at least 50 deaths, the majority of them local ranchers, private security guards, and police officers, along with several insurgents. During that same period the group perpetrated 28 kidnappings for ransom and a total of 85 "violent acts".
Terrorism in Ecuador is a rare occurrence as the country, despite recurrent periods of economic and political instability, has
FARC dissidents, also known as Carlos Patiño Front, are a group, formerly part of the Revolutionary Armed Forces of Colombia (FARC), who have refused to lay down their arms after the Colombian peace process came into effect in 2016, or resumed their insurgency afterwards. In 2018, the dissidents numbered some 2,000, to 2,500, armed combatants with an unknown number of civilian militia supporting them. The FARC dissidents have become "an increasing headache" for the Colombian armed forces, as they have to fight them, the Popular Liberation Army (EPL), the National Liberation Army (ELN), and the Clan del Golfo at the same time.
Walter Patricio Arízala Vernaza, also known as William Quiñonez or Luis Alfredo Pai Jiménez,, better known by his nom de guerreAlias Guacho was an Ecuadorian, member of Revolutionary Armed Forces of Colombia (FARC), after 2016 peace agreement became a FARC dissident.
On 17 January 2019, a vehicle was driven into the General Santander National Police Academy in Bogotá, Colombia. The truck forced its way into the facility, hit a wall and detonated, killing 22 people and injuring 68 others. Suicide attacks are unusual in Colombia. The car contained about 80 kilograms (180 lb) of pentolite. It was the deadliest attack on the Colombian capital since the 2003 El Nogal Club bombing and the first terrorist attack on the capital since the 2017 Centro Andino bombing. The National Liberation Army (ELN) accepted responsibility for the attack and justified it as a response to the bombings made by the Colombian government during the unilateral ceasefire.
Lucía de Lourdes Sosa Robinzon is an Ecuadorian teacher, engineer, and politician, who was prefect of Esmeraldas Province from 2005 to 2013 and 2014 to 2018, and was mayor of the city of the same name from 2019 to 2023.
The 2021 Apure clashes started on 21 March 2021 in the south of the Páez Municipality, in the Apure state in Venezuela, specifically in La Victoria, a location bordering with Colombia, between guerrilla groups identified as Revolutionary Armed Forces of Colombia (FARC-EP) dissidents and the Venezuelan government led by Nicolás Maduro.
Since around 2018, Ecuador has suffered a security crisis resulting from conflicts between criminal organizations with connections to drug trafficking. In recent years, coca leaf production has risen in neighboring Colombia and Peru, with both cocaine and coca base entering Ecuador by land and leaving by sea.
On 9 January 2024, an armed conflict broke out in Ecuador involving the country's government against several organized crime groups, most notably the Los Choneros cartel.
The Ecuadorian Drug War is an internal conflict in Ecuador waged by the Ecuadorian security forces against criminal groups since the beginning of 2018. The conflict is divided into two parts, the first is the Ecuadorian government against satellite groups of the Jalisco New Generation Cartel and Sinaloa Cartel, and the second is the confrontation between said satellite groups for dominance and hegemony.