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Ecuador (AFP) – Clashes between drug gangs on Thursday claimed at least 17 lives in the second deadly riot in an Ecuadoran prison in days, with rampaging inmates beheading and maiming rivals, officials in the violence-wracked country said.

The fighting in the troubled coastal city of Esmeraldas, near the Colombian border, added to a toll of about 500 inmates massacred in Ecuador since 2021.

Images shared on social media and verified by AFP show dead men sprawled on the ground with bare, blood-stained torsos. At least two of them were decapitated, and many had stab wounds.

Dozens of worried family members gathered outside the prison for news of their loved ones Thursday as the SNAI prison authority raised the official toll from 10 in the morning to 17 by lunchtime.

"There are women here who have been asking after their relatives since 5:30am," an anguished woman, who asked not to be named, told AFP.

She herself rushed to the prison after receiving a call from people who live nearby and told her "they heard the shooting, they heard the screams."

When she arrived, she said, soldiers told her to go to the morgue to check if her loved one was dead or alive.

On Monday, 13 prisoners and a guard were killed in southwest Ecuador, whose overcrowded and violent prisons have become hubs for organized crime groups.

In that incident, prisoners used guns and explosives and an unknown number escaped. Some were recaptured.

Nestled between the globe's top two cocaine exporters -- Colombia and Peru -- Ecuador has seen violence spiral in recent years as rival gangs with ties to international cartels vie for control.

More than 70 percent of all cocaine produced in the world now passes through the ports of Ecuador, a country of around 17 million people, according to government data.

Since February 2021, gang wars have largely played out inside the country's prisons, where inmates have often been killed in gruesome fashion -- their bodies dismembered and burnt.

Ecuador's biggest prison massacre happened in 2021, when more than 100 inmates were killed in the port city of Guayaquil in the southwest.

Inmates have on more than one occasion gone live on social media to broadcast their attacks, showing off the maiming of their enemies.

Last year, gang members took scores of prison guards hostage after the jailbreak of narco boss Jose Adolfo Macias, while allies on the outside detonated bombs and held a television presenter at gunpoint live on air.

President Daniel Noboa has declared a "state of internal armed conflict" and ordered that the military temporarily take control of the prisons.

Macias -- the boss of the Los Choneros gang -- was recaptured in June this year, more than a year after his escape.

He had been serving a 34-year sentence since 2011 for involvement in organized crime, drug trafficking and murder, but he continued pulling the strings of the criminal underworld from behind bars.

Videos emerged of Macias holding wild parties before he escaped from prison, some with fireworks, illustrating the lawlessness of such facilities.

 

Sanaa (AFP) – Israel struck Sanaa on Thursday, killing at least eight people and wounding more than 140, Yemen's Huthis said, a day after the rebels launched a drone attack on southern Israel.

Israeli forces struck several Huthi-linked targets in the rebel-held capital, Israeli officials said, warning of more attacks to come. Huthi media said the targets included a detention facility.

The Israeli military later said "a missile launched from Yemen was intercepted", after sirens sounded in central Israel.

AFP correspondents in Sanaa heard explosions and saw plumes of smoke rising from three locations in the Sanaa area, in the latest retaliatory attack since the Huthis began targeting Israel in the wake of the Gaza war.

Huthi health ministry spokesman Anees Alasbahi said in a post on X that the tally "rose to eight martyrs and 142 wounded", adding that rescuers were still searching for victims under the rubble.

The Huthis' Al-Masirah television channel said, citing a security source, that Israel "targeted one of the (security and intelligence) service's correctional facilities, which houses a number of prisoners and detainees".

Al-Masirah earlier said that a power station and two residential neighbourhoods had been targeted, sharing pictures that showed low-rise buildings with bombed-out windows.

One picture showed twisted metal and pieces of concrete filled the street as people looked on, with another photo showing people on the roof of a badly damaged building.

An Israeli military statement said the targets included the Huthis' general staff headquarters, other security and intelligence sites including some used to store weapons and "plan and execute" attacks on Israel.

It added that the rebels' "military public relations headquarters" was also targeted.

The Israeli strikes on Sanaa came moments before Al-Masirah began broadcasting rebel leader Abdul Malik al-Huthi's weekly pre-recorded speech.

The impact sites were cordoned off, an AFP correspondent said. The Huthi authorities have previously warned Yemenis against publishing footage of locations hit in strikes, describing it as "a service to the enemy".

On Wednesday, a drone attack claimed by the Huthis struck the southern Israeli tourist resort of Eilat after failed attempts by Israel's air defences to intercept it.

Rescuers reported 22 wounded including two in serious condition.

 

Frankfurt (Germany) (AFP) – German industrial giant Bosch said Thursday it would cut 13,000 jobs, mostly in its auto unit, in the latest blow for the country's ailing car sector.

The auto industry in Europe's biggest economy has been hammered by fierce competition in key market China, weak demand and a slower than expected shift to electric vehicles.

The cuts, all of which will take place in Germany, represent about 10 percent of Bosch's total workforce in the country, and three percent of its staff worldwide.

Bosch -- the world's biggest auto supplier, making everything from braking and steering systems to sensors -- said the layoffs were needed to help make annual savings of 2.5 billion euros ($2.9 billion) in the group's car unit.

"Demand for our products is shifting significantly to regions outside Europe," said Stefan Grosch, head of industrial relations at Bosch. "We need to orient ourselves to where our markets and customers are."

Workers' representatives vowed to resist the cuts, labelling them "unprecedented".

Bosch had already announced 9,000 layoffs since last year and other automotive suppliers, including Schaeffler and Continental, have also laid off thousands.

The top carmakers themselves are facing serious problems, with 10-brand Volkswagen -- Europe's top automaker -- planning to cut thousands of jobs in Germany as sales and profits slide.

Sports car maker Porsche, a VW subsidiary, last week hit the brakes on its EV rollout due to weak demand.

The shift to EVs has been a key challenge, with many groups having invested heavily in the transition but electric cars failing to take off in a major way in Europe.

A fierce automotive price war in China is meanwhile cutting into car-part makers' margins, reducing their room for manoeuvre.

"There is great price and competitive pressure on the entire automotive industry," Zehe said. "On both carmakers as well as their suppliers."

And in the long-run, carmakers are increasingly looking to source components from local partners when they sell abroad, threatening the need for car parts made in Germany.

"The trend towards localisation is unstoppable," Markus Heyn -- head of Bosch Mobility, the auto unit -- told the Stuttgarter Zeitung newspaper earlier this month. "The days when Germany could produce a great deal for the rest of the world are over."

While agreeing that the situation in the German automotive industry was "very tense", Frank Sell, head of the Bosch Mobility works council, vowed to fight the cuts.

"We nevertheless totally reject these historically unprecedented job cuts," he said, pointing out that Bosch had offered no guarantees that it would not close sites in Germany.

"Bosch is not only breaching the trust of those who have made this company big and succesful but leaving behind social devastation in many regions," he said.

Speaking to reporters, Grosch said Germany remained "central" to Bosch's future.

"We stand by it as a location and stand by Europe and are doing all we can to continually improve our competitiveness by our own efforts," he said.

 

The US has prevented Iranian diplomats from going anywhere beyond the perimeters of UN headquarters and buying anything from the wholesale club stores in New York city, calling the measure a part of its unilateral sanctions regime.

Archived version: https://archive.is/newest/https://peoplesdispatch.org/2025/09/25/iran-calls-restrictions-on-its-diplomats-attending-unga-session-in-new-york-a-new-low-of-us-animosity/


Disclaimer: The article linked is from a single source with a single perspective. Make sure to cross-check information against multiple sources to get a comprehensive view on the situation.

 

Behind the slogans of anti-colonial liberation, the Sahel has become the front line of a new Cold War – with Africans bearing the cost.

 

The elimination of the diesel subsidy has sparked multiple protests across the country. President Noboa defends the decision and aims to change the country's entire legal framework.

Archived version: https://archive.is/newest/https://peoplesdispatch.org/2025/09/25/national-strike-in-ecuador-met-with-heavy-repression/


Disclaimer: The article linked is from a single source with a single perspective. Make sure to cross-check information against multiple sources to get a comprehensive view on the situation.

 

The European Commission and the European Investment Bank (EIB) signed a financing facility with the Palestine Monetary Authority (PMA) to support the Palestinian private sector, amid rising tensions in the West Bank and East Jerusalem.

Archived version: https://archive.is/newest/https://www.euronews.com/my-europe/2025/09/25/eu-signs-400-million-financial-agreement-for-palestine


Disclaimer: The article linked is from a single source with a single perspective. Make sure to cross-check information against multiple sources to get a comprehensive view on the situation.

 

As Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu flies to New York, his plane is avoiding a lot of European airspace over arrest concerns.

Archived version: https://archive.is/newest/https://onemileatatime.com/news/netanyahu-flies-new-york-avoids-european-airspace-arrest-fears/


Disclaimer: The article linked is from a single source with a single perspective. Make sure to cross-check information against multiple sources to get a comprehensive view on the situation.

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