The Prague Post - Guatemalans enter state of siege over surge in gang violence

EUR -
AED 4.276764
AFN 76.286576
ALL 96.509755
AMD 440.446409
ANG 2.084615
AOA 1066.716604
ARS 1672.276261
AUD 1.732943
AWG 2.096168
AZN 1.984303
BAM 1.955998
BBD 2.342237
BDT 142.244377
BGN 1.95569
BHD 0.438999
BIF 3442.762757
BMD 1.164538
BND 1.494757
BOB 8.064815
BRL 6.253776
BSD 1.162918
BTN 105.62713
BWP 15.582575
BYN 3.347438
BYR 22824.939021
BZD 2.338836
CAD 1.614765
CDF 2532.869198
CHF 0.928463
CLF 0.026183
CLP 1033.865208
CNY 8.115488
CNH 8.100658
COP 4282.296276
CRC 566.757285
CUC 1.164538
CUP 30.860249
CVE 110.27662
CZK 24.299714
DJF 207.080931
DKK 7.470585
DOP 74.00748
DZD 151.521352
EGP 55.221679
ERN 17.468066
ETB 181.479843
FJD 2.646759
FKP 0.871016
GBP 0.867505
GEL 3.132803
GGP 0.871016
GHS 12.56527
GIP 0.871016
GMD 86.1757
GNF 10181.07276
GTQ 8.91694
GYD 243.294591
HKD 9.080273
HNL 30.6691
HRK 7.534671
HTG 152.286046
HUF 385.602916
IDR 19770.240166
ILS 3.674524
IMP 0.871016
INR 105.859098
IQD 1523.453982
IRR 49056.151012
ISK 146.207751
JEP 0.871016
JMD 183.519337
JOD 0.825642
JPY 183.960275
KES 150.015703
KGS 101.839116
KHR 4683.493491
KMF 494.928236
KPW 1048.082882
KRW 1721.770434
KWD 0.358631
KYD 0.969098
KZT 591.53979
LAK 25147.541777
LBP 104138.125716
LKR 360.206408
LRD 210.482178
LSL 19.162337
LTL 3.438577
LVL 0.704417
LYD 6.319639
MAD 10.719683
MDL 19.862008
MGA 5272.532919
MKD 61.556486
MMK 2445.214696
MNT 4150.453063
MOP 9.340144
MRU 46.422692
MUR 53.895038
MVR 18.003479
MWK 2016.503817
MXN 20.482936
MYR 4.720451
MZN 74.413723
NAD 19.162337
NGN 1650.766933
NIO 42.794509
NOK 11.716781
NPR 169.003082
NZD 2.002585
OMR 0.447769
PAB 1.162918
PEN 3.906095
PGK 4.968524
PHP 69.267895
PKR 325.409891
PLN 4.223813
PYG 7752.783609
QAR 4.251448
RON 5.092402
RSD 117.401669
RUB 90.251722
RWF 1696.078713
SAR 4.36686
SBD 9.460251
SCR 15.532969
SDG 700.474256
SEK 10.717421
SGD 1.49692
SHP 0.873705
SLE 28.123104
SLL 24419.772554
SOS 663.469909
SRD 44.591891
STD 24103.579304
STN 24.502582
SVC 10.175028
SYP 12879.291968
SZL 19.155936
THB 36.338817
TJS 10.838342
TMT 4.087527
TND 3.406559
TOP 2.803927
TRY 50.395401
TTD 7.892798
TWD 36.848888
TZS 2940.815227
UAH 50.323986
UGX 4052.409596
USD 1.164538
UYU 44.904732
UZS 13911.465825
VES 397.474538
VND 30586.582826
VUV 140.134808
WST 3.24928
XAF 656.026124
XAG 0.012567
XAU 0.00025
XCD 3.147221
XCG 2.095812
XDR 0.815882
XOF 656.023307
XPF 119.331742
YER 277.713132
ZAR 19.085434
ZMK 10482.236665
ZMW 23.287354
ZWL 374.980666
  • GSK

    -0.9000

    48.22

    -1.87%

  • RBGPF

    0.0000

    84.04

    0%

  • RELX

    -0.2200

    41.63

    -0.53%

  • CMSC

    -0.0700

    23.48

    -0.3%

  • RYCEF

    0.0500

    17.08

    +0.29%

  • AZN

    0.4740

    94.427

    +0.5%

  • SCS

    0.0200

    16.14

    +0.12%

  • NGG

    1.5300

    80.89

    +1.89%

  • CMSD

    -0.0600

    23.92

    -0.25%

  • JRI

    0.1600

    13.7

    +1.17%

  • BTI

    0.1400

    58.22

    +0.24%

  • VOD

    0.0200

    13.47

    +0.15%

  • RIO

    -1.2200

    85.13

    -1.43%

  • BCE

    -0.1000

    24.14

    -0.41%

  • BCC

    -0.7600

    85.51

    -0.89%

  • BP

    0.2300

    35.38

    +0.65%

Guatemalans enter state of siege over surge in gang violence

Guatemalans enter state of siege over surge in gang violence

Streets were half-empty Monday in the capital city of Guatemala, where outrage and fear lingered during the first day of the 30-day state of emergency decreed by the government in response to the murder of nine police officers and riots in several prisons.

Text size:

On Sunday, suspected members of the notorious Barrio 18 gang carried out a wave of attacks on the police after security forces put down a prison mutiny.

Eight officers were killed on Sunday and a ninth died of his injuries on Monday.

President Bernardo Arevalo declared a 30-day emergency on Sunday over the violence, which caused deep shock among Guatemalans.

On Monday, he presided over a memorial ceremony for the slain police officers at the interior ministry.

The streets of the capital Guatemala City were semi-deserted and private schools, courts and universities remained shuttered.

Sitting on a bench in the historic center of Guatemala City, an octogenarian told AFP that he believed the only way to stamp out criminal gangs was by "burning them."

"A criminal caught, a criminal killed, because there's no other way...It's like a tree; if you don't pull out the roots, it will sprout again," the man, who gave only his last name, Espana, said.

He called for Guatemala's government to emulate the iron-fisted policies of President Nayib Bukele of neighboring El Salvador.

Bukele has imprisoned tens of thousands of men without charge, as part of a war on gangs which has led to a sharp drop in El Salvador's murder rate but caused an outcry over human rights abuses.

Alejandra Donis, a 30-year-old shopkeeper, also held Bukele up as an example of leadership.

"There was a point in El Salvador where it was scary to just go out, right? And now it's a place that's quite touristy; you can go there, and it feels peaceful," she said.

- 'The Wolf' -

The unrest in Guatemala began when inmates at three prisons took 45 guards and a psychiatrist hostage on Saturday to demand gang leaders be transferred from a maximum-security prison to more lenient facilities.

On Sunday, the police and army stormed all three penitentiaries and restored control.

After the first prison raid, the interior ministry published a video on X showing officers handcuffing and leading away Barrio 18's alleged leader in Guatemala, whom authorities identified as Aldo Dupie, alias "El Lobo" (The Wolf).

In response to the crackdown, gang members attacked police stations and patrols.

The coffins of the slain police officers were draped in Guatemalan blue-and-white flags at the interior ministry and flanked by colleagues in uniform, standing to attention.

Arevalo, dressed in a black suit, greeted the grieving relatives, hugging some.

- FBI help sought -

Barrio 18 and the rival gang Mara Salvatrucha (MS-13) are blamed for much of the drug trafficking and criminal violence that plague Central America.

Washington has declared both to be terrorist organizations.

Arevalo said the declared state of emergency would allow the police and army to act against organized crime, but soldiers remained in their barracks on Monday, awaiting orders.

Since mid-2025, gang members have staged several uprisings in Guatemalan prisons to demand their leaders be held in less restrictive conditions.

In October, 20 leaders of Barrio 18 escaped from prison.

Only six have been recaptured, while another was shot and killed.

The government at the time asked for the help of the FBI to track down the remaining escapees.

Across Latin America, gang members continue to run criminal enterprises, from drug trafficking rings to extortion rackets, from behind bars -- often with the collusion of corrupt prison officials.

X.Kadlec--TPP