The screams began before dawn—gunfire, explosions, and chaos echoing through the prison. By sunrise, more than 30 inmates were dead and dozens more injured, leaving a country already on edge facing renewed shock and fear.
Officials quickly labeled it a riot, but inside the facility, the violence appeared far more coordinated. Reports of hangings and asphyxiations suggested deliberate killings rather than spontaneous disorder.
The incident in Machala reflected a deeper crisis inside Ecuador’s prison system, where overcrowding and weak control have allowed criminal groups to gain significant influence behind bars.
What may have triggered the outbreak was the transfer of inmates to a new high-security facility, but experts say the underlying cause runs much deeper. Years of allowing gangs to consolidate power have turned prisons into organized criminal hubs.
Families gathered outside prison gates as news spread, desperate for information about loved ones. Many were left waiting in silence, relying on incomplete lists and uncertain official updates.
Inside government offices, authorities promised investigations and reforms, but they continue to face powerful drug-trafficking networks that operate with structure and discipline inside the prison system.
The Machala tragedy has become another grim reminder that without meaningful change, Ecuador’s prisons risk remaining battlegrounds where violence repeats itself with devastating regularity.
