Ecuador’s Massive Cocaine Seizure Hints at Country’s Growing Drug Trade Role

Published: 11 May 2017

Narco submarine seized in Ecuador

Narco submarine seized in Ecuador (Photo: US Drug Enforcement Administration)

By Vanja Lakic

In just four days, Ecuador seized 3.2 metric tons of cocaine, raising concerns about the country’s growing involvement in transnational drug trafficking and its ability to handle security challenges, Insight Crime reported Wednesday.

Police confiscated the drugs between May 4 and May 7 along Ecuador’s Pacific coast. The shipments were reportedly headed to the United States and Europe.

“We are giving complete priority to operations against drug trafficking and organized crimes," Ecuador’s security official, Diego Fuentes, said following Friday’s raids that resulted in the arrest of 23 alleged drug ring members.

Once considered one of the safest countries in the region, discoveries of multi-ton shipments of cocaine are now common in Ecuador, and total drug seizures have increased year by year.

InSight Crime explains that several factors could account for this trend including a boom in coca production in neighbouring Colombia and Peru.

In addition, the demobilization of the Revolutionary Armed Forces of Colombia (FARC) has likely led criminal groups to take control of crop-growing territories abandoned by the guerrillas.

Organized crime groups such as Rastrojos and Urabenos in Colombia and the Mexican Sinaloa cartel have traditionally controlled large-scale drug trafficking in the country.

However, Ecuador has also seen the emergence of powerful homegrown drug trafficking organizations such as Washington Prado Alava, whose nameless syndicate moved 250 metric tons of Colombian cocaine in a span of two years.

Prado, dubbed the “Pablo Escobar” of Ecuador was captured by Colombian police in April.