Crime & Justice

Seven killed in latest Ecuador pool hall shooting

Ecuador's gangs, fueled by corruption and its dollar economy, battle for control of drug routes. Preliminary probes link the latest killings to organized crime's bloody grip.

A military officer observes bullet impacts on the pickup truck. [Marcos Pin/AFP]
A military officer observes bullet impacts on the pickup truck. [Marcos Pin/AFP]

By AFP |

Gunmen shot dead at least seven people at a pool hall in the Ecuadoran city of Santo Domingo, police said on August 17, in the country's latest gruesome massacre amid soaring gang violence.

"Seven people died from gunshot wounds" at a pool hall in the nightlife district of Santo Domingo, about 150km (93 miles) west of the capital Quito, national police said in a WhatsApp group with reporters.

Police said they were investigating the incident and hunting for those responsible.

Purported security camera footage of the massacre circulating online showed several attackers wearing black masks open fire on two men standing at the entrance to the pool hall, sending pedestrians scrambling.

The gunmen then entered the hall and continued shooting, fleeing before a police vehicle approached.

According to local media, preliminary investigations indicated that the killings may be related to organized crime in the region.

Surge in homicides

A similar pool hall massacre took place last month in the southwestern tourist city of General Villamil Playas, leaving at least nine dead. And in April, armed men killed 12 people at a cockfighting ring around 30km from Santo Domingo.

Once considered a bastion of peace in Latin America, Ecuador has been plunged into crisis after years of expansion by transnational cartels that use its ports to ship drugs to the United States and Europe.

Drug trafficking organizations have been multiplying in Ecuador, where the homicide rate rose from six per 100,000 residents in 2018 to 38 per 100,000 in 2024.

Between January and May, there were more than 4,051 homicides, according to official figures. Analysts say it is the most violent start to a year in the country's recent history.

President Daniel Noboa's government has promised to crack down on crime, but despite widespread operations and constant states of emergency, there has been little reduction in the violence.

Last weekend alone, 14 people were killed in massacres in the troubled province of Guayas, one of four provinces where Noboa recently declared a state of emergency to combat gang violence.

Gangs vying for control of drug trafficking routes in Ecuador have taken advantage of the country's strategic location, its US-dollar-based economy and the corruption of some authorities.

According to official figures, 73% of the world's cocaine production passes through Ecuadorian ports.

In 2024, the country seized a record 294 tons of drugs, mainly cocaine, compared to 221 tons in 2023.

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