Ecuador has dispatched 4,000 elite personnel from its armed forces and police to the Zonal 8 Detention Center in Guayas province, two days after declaring a state of emergency in the wake of the assassination of presidential candidate Fernando Villavicencio.
Villavicencio was fatally shot as he was leaving a campaign rally at a school north of the capital Quito, 10 days before the first round of the presidential election was set to take place. He was 59 years old.
Nine other people, including a candidate for the National Assembly and two police officers, were also injured in the attack.
Villavicencio
Villavicencio’s assassination prompted condemnation from Ecuador and the international community. It came just 10 days before the first round of the presidential election was set to take place.
Authorities on Thursday said they had arrested six suspects, all Colombian nationals and gang members, in connection with Villavicencio’s assassination.
He was laid to rest in a private ceremony which took place at the Monteolivo cemetery in northern Quito on Friday.
The Ecuadorian Army Command said in a statement on Sunday, , August 13 that the deployment is intended to “establish control over weapons, ammunition and explosives within the prison,”
The deployment comprises of 2,000 military members and 2,000 police officers, it said.
Among the people currently incarcerated in the prison is José Adolfo Macías Villamar, known popularly as “Fito,” who was jailed after being convicted of drug trafficking. Images released by the armed forces on Saturday showed Macías being restrained and searched inside the facility.
In the lead-up to his assassination, Villavicencio – a former journalist – had said in a televised interview on July 31 that he had been threatened by Macías and been warned against campaigning..
About 4,000 police and military personnel participated in transferring one of Ecuador’s most notorious crime bosses, José Adolfo Macías, aka Fito, to a maximum security prison.
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Villavicencio, an anti-corruption campaigner and lawmaker, had previously been outspoken about gang violence caused by drug trafficking in Ecuador.
Ecuadorian President, Guillermo Lasso announced Saturday that Macías would be relocated to the La Roca maximum security prison after drugs, weapons, ammunition and explosives were found.
The Prosecutor’s Office said in a statement that it had “opened an investigation and other dangerous prisoners will be transferred.”.
Villavicencio’s widow Veronica Sarauz has blamed the state for her husband’s murder and demanded answers as to why it happened.
“They did not protect him as they should have protected him,” Sarauz told a news conference on Saturday.
“The state was in charge of Fernando’s security. The state is directly responsible for the murder of my husband.”
“The state still has to give many answers about everything that happened. His personal guards did not do their job,” she said.
The first round of Ecuador’s presidential elections is scheduled to be held on August 20.