Olympic sprinter Alex Quiñónez fatally shot in Ecuador

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Ecuador President Guillermo Lasso vowed in a statement that the slaying “will not go unpunished.”
Image: Alex Quinonez celebrates after taking bronze in the Men's 200m final at the 2019 IAAF Athletics World Championships in Doha, Qatar, on Oct. 1, 2019.
Alex Quiñónez celebrates after winning bronze in the Men's 200m final at the world championship in Doha, Qatar, on Oct. 1, 2019.Mustafa Abumunes / AFP - Getty Images file

GUAYAQUIL, Ecuador — Ecuadorian sprinter Alex Quiñónez was fatally shot in the port city of Guayaquil, police said Saturday.

Quiñónez, who was 32, became a national hero in 2012 when he reached the 200 meter final at the London Games, finishing seventh in a race won by Usain Bolt.

Guayaquil-based newspaper El Universo reported that Quiñónez was fatally shot on a street in the northwest section of the city around 9:20 p.m. Friday and that another man was also killed.

There were no immediate report of arrests.

Ecuador President Guillermo Lasso vowed in a statement on Saturday that the slaying “will not go unpunished.”

Quiñónez’s death was also confirmed by the Ecuadorian Olympic Committee Olympic Committee in a statement on Saturday. It said the circumstances of his death “have not yet been clarified.”

Image: Relatives mourn next to Alex Quiñonez' coffin at a funeral home in southern Guayaquil, Ecuador on Oct. 23, 2021.
Relatives mourn next to Alex Quiñonez' coffin at a funeral home in southern Guayaquil, Ecuador, on Oct. 23, 2021. Fernando Mendez / AFP - Getty Images

Quiñónez won bronze in the 200 at the 2019 world championship in Doha.

Andrea Sotomayor, the secretary general of the Ecuadorian Olympic Committee, expressed her sorrow and outrage on Twitter, decrying “so much evil.”

“I don’t have words to express the sadness, helplessness and indignation that is overwhelming me,” wrote Sotomayor, who was formerly Minister of Sport. “Álex Quiñónez was the synonym of humility and a clear example of resilience. His loss leaves us with pain in our chests.”

Guayaquil and other parts of Ecuador have been struggling with high levels of crime. This month, Lasso decreed a state of emergency to confront drug trafficking and other crimes in Ecuador, saying the military and police will take to the streets to provide security.

This year, there have been revolts in the country’s prisons due to drug violence, especially in Guayaquil, which have ended in massacres by inmates of rival gangs linked to Mexican drug cartels. About 230 people have been killed in those compounds.

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