Security

Ecuador seizes bomb-making material headed to Colombia

Colombia's former rebels have morphed into cartels, igniting fresh conflict over the world's most profitable cocaine routes.

Police officers carry debris from the site of a bomb explosion in Cali, Colombia, on August 21. [Iusef Samir Rojas/AFP]
Police officers carry debris from the site of a bomb explosion in Cali, Colombia, on August 21. [Iusef Samir Rojas/AFP]

By AFP |

Ecuador seized a huge shipment of bomb-making materials being transported in a truck from the country's Peruvian border to Colombia, where it was intended to be used in "terrorist acts," police said on August 24.

The seizure comes as Colombia endures its worst security crisis in decades, with two guerrilla attacks -- one of which used a truck bomb -- killing 19 people and wounding dozens on August 21.

The Ecuadoran police said they seized 3,750 cartridges of explosive emulsion and 15 miles (25,000 meters) of detonating cord in an operation on the Colombian border.

"We identified explosive material that was intended to be used to carry out terrorist acts in Colombia," the police said on X.

A man and a woman were arrested during the operation. Images from the scene showed that the material was wrapped in plastic bags inside the small truck.

The explosive materials were being transported in a truck that left the southwest Ecuadoran province of El Oro -- which borders Peru -- to the northern Carchi province near the Colombian border, where the operation took place.

Police helicopter shot down

The police discovered during a routine check in the town of San Gabriel.

"After an exhaustive search, it was discovered that the vehicle was carrying a large quantity of hidden explosives," the police said in a statement.

The discovery came after a truck bomb exploded on a busy street in the tropical Colombian city of Cali on August 21, killing six civilians and wounding more than 60 people.

Just hours earlier, guerrillas had attacked a police operation destroying coca crops, which are used to produce cocaine, near the city of Medellin in Colombia's northwest. A police helicopter was shot down and 13 officers were killed.

The authorities blamed the attacks on rival guerrilla groups that split from the once-powerful Revolutionary Armed Forces of Colombia (FARC) in rejection of a 2016 peace accord.

Many of Colombia's armed groups -- once based on leftist or right-wing ideologies -- are now de facto drug cartels, funding themselves through the lucrative cocaine trade.

Two guerrillas were arrested on August 23 over the Cali truck bomb attack.

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