Ecuador

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josh
Ecuador

Ecuadorean President Lenin Moreno is expected to announce a new economic plan which will include tax regulations and labor flexibilization, according to the country's Productive and Tax Council.

Moreno has until Wednesday to announce the economic reforms based on proposals he received from a group of businessmen in the country.

The main proposals include fewer taxes for companies and less restrictions on labor issues, such as work hours and social security for workers. Another proposal would eliminate taxes on large money transactions and taxes for imports which were created to protect local production in Ecuador. Meanwhile, Labor Ministry Raul Ledesma said about 15,000 job positions will be cut in the public sector.

The council discussed eliminating the law against land speculation but stated that will be presented in the upcoming plebiscite proposed by Moreno.

Vice President Jorge Glas used to preside over the body and claims that wealthy businesspeople sought to remove him from his position since he was an obstacle to promoting neoliberal measures that would affect the majority of people.

https://www.telesurtv.net/english/news/Ecuadors-Moreno-to-Announce-Econo...

 

NDPP

Moreno's Neoliberal Restoration Proceeds in Ecuador

https://www.counterpunch.org/2018/11/13/morenos-neoliberal-restoration-p...

"Moreno's remarkably cynical Neoliberal Restoration..."

Ken Burch

If he's gonna push for things like that, could he at least do the decent thing and change his first name to "Kissinger" or "Thatcher"?

NDPP

Although little known yet in the West, he is already well liked by the 'progressive' right-left for his stepped up belligerence and persecution of Julian Assange.

NDPP

"US media has a total blackout on Ecuador's popular uprising against neoliberal president Lenin Moreno. Follow for updates on the ground..."

https://twitter.com/dancohen3000/status/1181558330847895553

 

"I made a thread about the traitor Lenin Moreno who sold out Julian Assange  for a $4.2b IMF loan, fleeing the capital of Ecuador as Indigenous protesters rose up..."

https://twitter.com/jaraparilla/status/1181471539994120192

josh

Ecuador’s president, Lenín Moreno, has said he has moved his government from the capital in Quito to the coastal city of Guayaquil amid violent protests over the end of fuel subsidies.

. . . .

Moreno, 66, who has moved away from the leftwing policies of his predecessor and one-time mentor Rafael Correa, has said he will neither tolerate disorder nor overturn the scrapping of fuel subsidies as part of a package of austerity measures.

Moreno accused political opponents of orchestrating an attempted coup and blamed associates of Correa of infiltrating the protests as part of a plot to topple his government, without providing evidence.

In a tweet, Correa said Moreno was “finished” and called for elections.

. . . .

Though he enjoys the support of business and the military, Moreno’s popularity has sunk to under 30%, compared with 70% in 2017.

https://www.theguardian.com/world/2019/oct/08/ecuador-moves-government-out-of-capital-as-violent-protests-rage

NDPP

Inside Ecuador's Citizens' Revolution (and vid)

https://twitter.com/TheGrayzoneNews/status/1358076084722556929

"Benjamin Norton traveled to Ecuador to report on the historic February 7 election, which pits a rich US-backed right-wing banker against a leftist economist who wants to advance the socialist citizens' revolution started by Rafael Correa."

kropotkin1951

Thx NDPP that was a good video. It looks like the left will win, the only question is whether or not there will be a run off vote and whether or not the US will interfere  if they don't get the result they want in the first round.

"The victory, as we have said, is big. It's a ratio of 2-to-1 against the banker candidate who appears to be in second place," Arauz told a news conference on Sunday.

"We have to see the final results, but we are very happy."

An exit poll by local pollster Clima Social showed Arauz with 36.2 per cent of the vote compared with 21.7 per cent for Lasso and 16.7 per cent for Perez.

A second poll by Cedatos showed Arauz with 34.9 per cent of the vote compared with 21 per cent for Lasso and 18 per cent for Perez.

To win in a single round, Arauz needs more than 50 per cent of valid votes, or 40 per cent total with 10 percentage points more than the runner-up.

Arauz did not say if he had enough votes to avoid a run-off.

The elections council was expected to release an official quick count between 7 pm and 8 pm local time.

https://thewest.com.au/politics/election/ecuadors-arauz-claims-election-...

 

kropotkin1951

It seems to be official the Neo-liberals have gone down in flaming defeat in Ecuador. The only question is whether the leftist party wings or the leftist indigenous party wins. It seems either way this election has been a win for the people. Moreno took a popular left of center coalition and handed to US capital and the people at the next election rejected this approach and want to return to the bosom of the Bolivarian revolution taking place in South America. Like in Bolivia and Venezuela when given the vote the people vote for themselves not the oligarchy.

Results of the presidential election of Ecuador until 4:40 AM ET this Monday, according to data from the National Electoral Council (CNE):

  • With a total of 38.968 minutes scrutinized (97.46%)
kropotkin1951

This Telesur article explains the three contenders backgrounds and politics.  They were right that these three were the only ones to have a chance of making it to the run-off. Although Correa did many good things in office Yaku Pérez and his political allies held protests against his and the subsequent sell-out Moreno government.

https://www.telesurenglish.net/news/Meet-the-Main-Candidates-in-Ecuadors...

NDPP

"If you want to know why the US is intervening in the Ecuadorian elections, it's to stop this from happening..."

https://twitter.com/OVargas52/status/1362196844290453510

josh

One, disputed, exit poll has Lasso beating Arauz 53-47.  A lot of Perez supporters were alienated by both candidates, as this article points out:

After these experiences, it shouldn’t surprise anyone that social movements are reluctant to support Correa’s designated successor. Correísmo earned the mistrust and hostility of all of the significant popular movements and organizations of Ecuador. The CONAIE and Pachakutik have called for voters to spoil their ballots on Sunday . . . .  They preferred a neoliberal president they could fight against to an authoritarian one.

https://www.dissentmagazine.org/online_articles/the-divided-left-in-ecuador

 

kropotkin1951

The right wing in Ecuador has a history of using exit polls to seed doubt about the legitimacy of election results.

https://www.telesurenglish.net/news/Ecuador-Update-Arauz-Asks-Citizens-T...

 

josh
josh

But the vote was not just a battle between the country’s left and right. Among the hallmarks of the election this year was the emergence of the country’s long marginalized Indigenous movement as a key driver of the political conversation.

When Mr. Lasso is sworn in later this year, he will be forced to reckon with the country’s Indigenous party, Pachakutik. Pachakutik and its allies jolted the nation in the first round of voting, in February, winning half of all states, becoming the second-largest presence in Congress and transforming the agendas of the finalists in Sunday’s presidential race.

https://www.nytimes.com/2021/04/11/world/americas/ecuador-election-indigenous.html

NDPP

"Very disappointing turn of events in Ecuador: Left-wing candidate Arauz conceded defeat without a whimper, after suspicious results from the corrupt electoral council, which is controlled by the right-wing. Arauz even said he will call banker candidate Lasso to congratulate him..."

https://twitter.com/BenjaminNorton/status/1381432886218350592

 

Ecuador's New Socialist Party Set to Win Elections Despite US Intervention and Deceptive Identity Politics

https://covertactionmagazine.com/2021/04/10/ecuadors-new-socialist-party...

"This article traces the past two months of Ecuador's chaotic national elections..."

kropotkin1951

At least the people will not have to die in the streets. If the vote was reversed the right wing would be screaming electoral fraud and reengaging the military to protect democracy.

laine lowe laine lowe's picture

Well this is a disappointment but with it being so close, hopefully there will be cooperation and some breaks on the right wing exploitive agenda.

NDPP

"Arauz was unable to beat the combined forces of the state, the oligarchy and the media. Bad news for the Ecuadorean economy that has collapsed since adopting Moreno/Laso free-market reforms."

https://twitter.com/OVargas52/status/1381469248313303041

Neoliberalism unleashed. Alas poor Ecuador.

kropotkin1951

It was the sell out by Moreno of the PAIS Alliance that caused this catastrophe. Hard to come back as a left wing party when your last elected President became a neo-liberal and screwed the people who put him in power.

kropotkin1951

The people will fight back. The demands being made will directly affect Canadian business interests in the country so you know that our embassy will do what ever it can to back the government.

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=9iwCkwZtZyE&t=442s

 

epaulo13

Ecuadorians continue to resist as national strike enters second week

Since June 13, hundreds of thousands of Ecuadorians have been mobilizing across the country as a part of an indefinite national strike against the right-wing government of President Guillermo Lasso and his anti-people economic policies. The strike was called for by various Indigenous, peasant and social organizations, with a set of ten demands that address the most urgent needs of the majority of Ecuador’s population.

Their demands include: reduction and freeze of fuel prices; employment opportunities and labor guarantees; an end to privatization of public companies; price control policies for essential products; greater budget for public education and health sectors; an end to drug trafficking, kidnappings and violence; protection for people against banking and finance sectors; fair prices for their farm products; ban on mining and oil exploitation activities in Indigenous territories; and respect for the 21 collective rights of Indigenous peoples and nationalities.

The Lasso administration has been responding to these demands with brutal repression. Since last Monday, the police and military officials have been repressing the demonstrators with pellets, tear gas and water cannons. According to the Alliance for Human Rights Organization, an Ecuadorian NGO, between June 13 and 19, state security forces committed 39 types of human rights violations against citizens participating in the national strike, detained 79 and injured 55 people, in addition to killing an 18-year-old Indigenous boy.

quote:

Resistance

Nevertheless, defying the state of emergency and enduring brutal police and military repression, hundreds of thousands continue to remain on the streets against neoliberalism.

The Confederation of Indigenous Nationalities of Ecuador (CONAIE), one of the main organizers of the strike, assured that the strike would continue until their demands were accepted.

According to CONAIE, Indigenous communities have been maintaining roadblocks in at least 16 of the 24 provinces of the country since last Monday. On the eighth day of the strike, CONAIE reported that Indigenous people from all parts of the country had been arriving in Quito to press for their demands.

CONAIE condemned that the demonstrations and roadblocks had been attacked by the security forces as well as right-wing extremist mobs, who unleashed attacks on women, children, and senior citizens. The confederation also criticized the state of emergency and repression.

“The decree of the state of emergency limits rights and confronts the people against the people. As of the 8th day of the national strike, 81 detentions, 52 injuries, 4 serious injuries, 11 with impacts on the eyes and face, 1 death were registered,” stated CONAIE......

epaulo13

epaulo13

Indigenous Protesters Attempt to Storm National Assembly in Ecuador

In Ecuador, Indigenous protesters tried to storm the National Assembly in the capital Quito on Thursday on the 11th day of demonstrations against right-wing President Guillermo Lasso’s economic policies and rising fuel prices. At least four protesters have been killed so far, and nearly 100 injured. The protests have been led by the Confederation of Indigenous Nationalities of Ecuador, or CONAI. This is the group’s leader, Leonidas Iza.

Leonidas Iza: “The house of culture has been taken by force by the people. It’s the first triumph, brothers and sisters. Second, what the national government is saying at this moment, it’s simply in their hands. We are not going to lose the north. I have been detained. They have tried to assassinate me. Yet we are alive, and we have said, 'Here are the 10 points and period.' And if for that reason the government falls, it is not our problem, brothers and sisters.”

epaulo13

Trudeau silent on police crackdown in Ecuador

Since mid-June, protests have been sweeping across Ecuador in opposition to President Guillermo Lasso’s neoliberal economic policies, and specifically his government’s inaction concerning shortages of food and fuel in the country. The protest movement, spearheaded by the Confederation of Indigenous Nationalities of Ecuador (CONAIE), has demanded that the Lasso government intervene in the markets to guarantee affordable gas prices at 45 cents per gallon and institute price controls in the agricultural sector. CONAIE is also demanding “a moratorium on the repayment of private bank loans held by rural people…more spending on healthcare, education, security and job creation, and an end to mining concessions in Indigenous territories.”

The protestors have organized over 900 road closures across 23 provinces. As the protest movement intensified over the past week, ultimately moving into nation’s capital, police repression increased. Lasso’s government attempted to stem the resistance by declaring a state of exception in six provinces and arbitrarily arresting protest leaders like Leonidas Iza, president of CONAIE, which ultimately backfired when thousands of supporters marched to the prison where Iza was being held, drawing international attention to the arrest and helping to ensure his safe release. After stepping free, Iza vowed to maintain the resistance and “consolidate the strength of the various other organizations and sectors of the country which have joined the strike.”

So far, four protestors have been killed by security forces, one of them a Kichwa man who died from a teargas canister fired directly into his head. Police denied that they were responsible for the death, saying the protestor died “as a result of handling an explosive device,” but CT scans clearly show that his skull was shattered by a canister fired at close range.

The most recent killing of a protestor was on June 23. This person died from “penetrating trauma to the thorax and abdomen caused by pellets” while protesting in El Arbolito park in Quito. CONAIE has also accused police of “indiscriminately causing hundreds” of injuries, many of them serious in nature.

For over ten days, Lasso shunned dialogue with the Indigenous-led protest movement while his interior minister Patricio Carrillo demeaned them as “drunks” and “terrorists” and accused them of being influenced by “radical groups” like former president Rafael Correa’s left-wing Citizen’s Revolution. On June 23, the CONAIE members successfully resisted state pressure and were able to convene a massive assembly in the House of Culture in Quito, where they will decide the future of the strike.

Like other countries in the Global South, the current crisis of inflation and high commodity prices sweeping the world—inflamed by the blowback of Western sanctions against Russia—has crashed full-force into the Ecuadorian economy. The economic policies of Lasso, a conservative and millionaire ex-banker, has only made living conditions worse. “We have two main sources of income in exports,” explained Ecuadorian economist Juan Fernando Terán in an April 2022 interview with Kawsachun News. “The first is oil, [and] logically, the war in Ukraine should have been beneficial because the price of oil has risen…However, the conservative President Guillermo Lasso had already promised the IMF the payment from future oil sales. Even if the price of oil goes to $300 it won’t benefit ordinary citizens.”.....

epaulo13

Ecuadorian Indigenous Leaders Win Gov’t Concessions, Reach Deal to End Protests

In Ecuador, Indigenous leaders have reached an agreement with the government, ending nearly three weeks of massive protests due to rising food and fuel prices. The deal includes a decrease in fuel costs, sets limits on oil exploration on Indigenous land and prohibits mining on protected areas, national parks and water sources. The government has been given 90 days to act. Indigenous leaders have vowed to push the government to fulfill all demands.

josh

President Guillermo Lasso of Ecuador disbanded the country’s opposition-led National Assembly on Wednesday, a drastic move as the right-leaning leader faced impeachment proceedings over accusations of embezzlement.

The constitutional measure, never before used, allows the president to rule by decree until new elections can be held

https://www.nytimes.com/2023/05/17/world/americas/ecuador-president-diss...

jerrym

Ecuadorian presidential candidate Fernando Villavicencio, trade unionist and investigative journalist, as well as an outspoken critic of corruption and the drug-trafficking groups, was assassinated on Wednesday less than two weeks before the election date of August 20th.

As Ecuador reels from the assassination of a high-profile presidential candidate, experts say the event underscores growing violence driven by powerful criminal groups in the South American nation.

Fernando Villavicencio was killed at a political rally in the capital of Quito on Wednesday, sending shockwaves through Ecuador, which is set to hold a presidential election on August 20.

The candidate was as an outspoken critic of corruption and the drug-trafficking groups that have expanded their influence in Ecuador in recent years.

While details of the crime remain murky, Ecuador’s police have arrested six suspects, all of whom are Colombian, according to officials. A seventh suspect was killed in Wednesday’s gunfire.

In the hours following the shooting, President Guillermo Lasso blamed criminal networks for the violence.

“Organised crime has come a long way, but the full weight of the law is going to fall on them,” Lasso wrote on social media.

He declared a three-day state of emergency and appealed to the Federal Bureau of Investigation (FBI) in the United States for assistance in his government’s investigation.

Ecuador was once regarded as a source of relative calm in a region with a long history of violence and civil conflict. But over the last several years, the country has seen a surge in crime, with 2022 tallying record levels of homicides and drug seizures.

Given Ecuador’s location on the coast between cocaine-producing regions in Peru and Colombia, the country has become much sought-after territory for the drug trade. Ecuador’s gangs have increasingly joined forces with international drug-trafficking organisations, helping to drive the spike in violence.

The COVID-19 pandemic also had a devastating impact, particularly in poorer communities, with morgues overflowing in cities such as Guayaquil. The virus contributed to a severe economic downturn that Ecuador is still recovering from, and experts say a lack of employment opportunities has created a growing pool of potential recruits for criminal groups.

Government statistics indicate that less than four out of 10 Ecuadorians participating in the workforce were adequately employed, with the majority making less than the minimum wage of $450 a month. Since the beginning of the year, more than 822,000 people between the ages of 18 and 45 have left the country seeking opportunities elsewhere.

Juanita Goebertus, director of the Americas division for Human Rights Watch, tied Wednesday’s assassination to the ongoing instability in the country.

“This is a tragedy that was probably something people could expect, given the very serious deterioration of the security situation in Ecuador,” she told Al Jazeera. “If you compare the homicide rate between 2021 and 2022, there’s an increase of over 80 percent.”

Villavicencio’s death, for instance, comes just over two weeks after another high-profile assassination: that of Agustin Intriago, mayor of Manta, on July 23.

The increase in violence can be seen in other domains as well. Goebertus said the national police recorded 5,000 cases of extortion in 2022, a figure that is on track to double by the end of 2023.

Prisons, where gangs exercise substantial control, have been sites of especially grim violence. More than 30 people were killed in riots last month at a Guayaquil prison, leading the Lasso government to deploy armed forces to take back control of the facility.

Human Rights Watch said in a press release on Thursday that more than 600 people have been killed in prison massacres over the last several years. Poor conditions like overcrowding contributed to the violence, the nonprofit explained.

While the killing of Villavicencio has been met with condemnation across the political spectrum, it has already started to map onto familiar political divides.

“Within Ecuador, you’re seeing everyone condemn the assassination,” said Will Freeman, a fellow of Latin America studies at the Council on Foreign Relations, a US-based think tank. “Unfortunately, you’re also seeing people jumping to conclusions and to some extent trying to squeeze some political benefit out of this killing.”

Freeman said that critics have highlighted Villavicencio’s history of corruption allegations against former President Rafael Correa, seeming to imply — without evidence — that the assassination was a form of political payback.

Correa’s supporters have likewise accused President Lasso of mafia-like corruption in the wake of the shooting. Freeman said he expects Lasso’s allies to leverage the killing to advance their own priorities as well.

The proliferation of rumours underscores the necessity for a “rapid, transparent investigation” to provide the public with reliable information, Human Rights Watch’s Goebertus said.

Some figures have also used Villavincencio’s killing to bolster calls for a more heavy-handed response to crime in Ecuador.

Shortly after the shooting, for instance, presidential candidate Jan Topic posted a video on social media reiterating his call for a “mano dura” or “hard hand” against criminal groups.

He has previously expressed support for Ecuador to implement a “state of exception” similar to El Salvador’s, where certain civil liberties have been suspended in order to sweep tens of thousands of alleged gang members into prison.

Goebertus said that doing this would be a mistake. Her organisation has been outspoken against El Salvador’s gang crackdown, which has been tied to false arrests and torture.

No amount of force, Goebertus emphasised, can fill the void created by a state that lacks the capacity to function effectively and protect its people. She called instead for a more targeted approach.

“You need a security policy that can strategically persecute leaders of gangs, severing their links to access finance and corruption networks,” she said. “And that requires serious investigative and judicial capacity, as opposed to resorting to states of emergency or militarisation that have not proven effective.”

https://www.msn.com/en-us/news/other/what-does-the-assassination-of-a-pr...

 

jerrym

President Lasso had called the election to avoid impeachment. 

Lasso, who became president in 2021, has been criticized for doing little to curb the South American nation's rise in violent crime after taking office. He appeared to blame Villavicencio's shooting on organized crime in his post on X, which was translated from Spanish to English using Google Translate.

For the past several years, the South American nation has been plagued by a spike in violent crime, especially gang-related, according to the Council on Foreign Relations, a nonpartisan organization and think tank focusing on foreign policy. The uptick in violence coupled with the country's political instability had already caused tensions leading up to the election.

Lasso called the snap election after dissolving the country's National Assembly in May, averting his impeachment. Lasso is not running in the coming election.

https://www.newsweek.com/who-was-fernando-villavicencio-ecuador-presiden...

jerrym

Sadly Ecuador has become a narco state under Lasso. 

Ecuadorian presidential candidate Fernando Villavicencio, shot dead on the campaign trail on Wednesday, was known as a tireless anti-corruption campaigner and investigative journalist.

A 59-year-old lawmaker in the National Assembly, he had been outspoken about corruption and the violence caused by drug trafficking in the country, telling CNN En Español in May that Ecuador had become a “narco state” as he proposed to lead a fight against what he called the “political mafia.”

These declarations, his previous work and future political promises made him many powerful enemies. Villavicencio previously said that he had received death threats from crime groups.

His campaign promised a crackdown on crime and corruption amid a deadly escalation of violence that has gripped Ecuador in recent years.

The Andean country, a relatively peaceful nation until a few years ago, is now plagued by a turf war between rival criminal organizations. Violence has been most pronounced on Ecuador’s Pacific coast as criminal groups battle to control and distribute narcotics, primarily cocaine.

“Today Ecuador is controlled by Jalisco Nueva Generación, the Sinaloa Cartel – both from Mexico – as well as the Albanian mafia,” Villavicencio said in an interview with CNN en Español in May.

However, Villavicencio has long been known for his anti-corruption efforts. Aged just 18 he started a newspaper called Prensa Obrera (Workers Press), and he went on to work for the EP Petroecuador state oil company. Later, he would uncover corruption scandals in Ecuador’s booming oil industry, and also pushed for an investigation into an incident in which the army killed at least five people while freeing then President Rafael Correa from a hostage situation in 2010.

Correa filed a defamation lawsuit against Villavicencio, and he was later convicted to 18 months in prison as a result. Villavicencio went on the run to avoid detention, and gave an interview to the Committee to Protect Journalists (CPJ) in 2014. “The president wants me to get down on my knees and apologize,” he told the CPJ. “But I will never do that.”

Villavicencio later claimed asylum in Peru citing “political persecution” from the Correa government, according to Peruvian state broadcaster TV Peru. On Wednesday, Movimiento Construye, the political coalition that Villavicencio was running for, issued a statement praising him as a “tireless fighter” on Facebook. “Fernando Villavicencio bravely took on organized crime and he wasn’t afraid to criticize its links with politics,” reads the statement.

Villaviciencio was born in Alausí, central Ecuador, on October 11, 1963. He has authored a number of books investigating corruption in Ecuador, as well as building media outlets such as LaFuente.ec, MilHojas.is and periodismodeinvestigación.com. His political career began in 2009, when he worked as an adviser to lawmaker Cléver Jiménez. In 2021 he was elected to the national assembly himself, serving until May this year, when the assembly was dissolved ahead of elections that are still scheduled to take place on August 20.

https://kion546.com/news/2023/08/10/fernando-villavicencio-promised-to-c...

NDPP

Ecuador Descends Deeper into Chaos Following the Assassination of Presidential Candidate Fernando Villavicencio

https://www.nakedcapitalism.com/2023/08/ecuador-descends-deeper-into-cha...

"On the campaign trail Villavicencio portrayed himself as an anti-corruption-crusader and campaigned under the slogan, 'it's time for the brave.'

But as notes former British diplomat Craig Murray on his blog, Villavicencio's anti-corruption campaign was 'selective and aimed only at making accusations against left-wing figures.'

He also helped Luke Harding and Dan Collins fabricate The Guardian's infamous front-page story that Paul Manafort and Julian Assange held pro-Trump meetings in the Ecuadorian Embassy..."

josh

An establishment leftist and a newcomer businessman appeared to capture the top two spots in Ecuador’s presidential election on Sunday in a campaign cycle that has centered on voters’ frustration with the country’s soaring gang and drug cartel violence.

Luisa González, who was backed by a former socialist president, and the political outsider Daniel Noboa received the highest percentage of ballots with 84 percent of the vote counted. They will compete in a runoff election on Oct. 15.

https://www.nytimes.com/2023/08/20/world/americas/ecuador-election.html

jerrym

Here's a good examination of how Ecuador became a centre of the modern drug wars after decades of relative calm. 

Ecuador, according to its president Daniel Noboa, is now “in a state of war.” Earlier this week he had announced a state of emergency after the leader of one of the country’s top two gangs escaped from prison. The following day, armed gang members stormed the TC Television news program, broadcasting their hostage-taking and violence live to make an announcement of their own. ...

But this turn to violence in an upper-middle-income country of 18 million didn’t happen overnight.  While there are factors that accelerated a spike in crime over the last couple of years, experts say this is a story nearly a decade in the making. Ecuador’s security crisis is the product of years of growing impunity enjoyed by gangs, the influence of transnational crime groups, shifts in global cocaine consumption, and, above all, increasing institutional corruption. That means even with President Noboa’s promised military crackdown, this chaos won’t be solved overnight....

For decades, Ecuador’s stability and security distinguished it from its neighbors, Peru and Colombia, the largest cocaine producers in the world. Sandwiched between the two, Ecuador often acted as a drug transit country, but it did not suffer from the violence and armed conflict that plagued its neighbors.

n the 1990s, Ecuador’s drug trade “was controlled top-down by the FARC” — the Fuerzas Armadas Revolucionarias de Colombia, the Marxist guerrilla group that waged a 50-year struggle against the Colombian government — and “there wasn’t a ton of competition and there weren’t really any clashes with the Ecuadorean state” says Will Freeman, a fellow for Latin America studies at the Council on Foreign Relations. “It was a stable situation.”  Then in 2016, the FARC largely demobilized — a historic peace process for Colombia, but also one that created a power vacuum in northern Ecuador. Simultaneously, cocaine demand started shifting drastically, declining in the US and surging in Europe, where since 2016 cocaine seizures have quadrupled, according to Freeman. “That’s made control of ports much more important,” he says, as cocaine headed for Europe is loaded into shipping containers. “Obviously, you’re not flying little planes from Colombia to France.” And, well, Ecuador has some great ports for cocaine smugglers — specifically Guayaquil on the Pacific coast, the country’s largest port city and now the epicenter of the violent crisis. ...

This joint power vacuum and massive trafficking opportunity invited foreign groups like Mexican cartels and Venezuelan gangs to play a larger role in Ecuador’s drug trade. Even the Albanian mafia, Freeman says, capitalized on the FARC’s demobilization and flooded into Guayaquil to set up shop in the 2010s. 

Ecuador’s two largest gangs, Los Lobos and Los Choneros, had long maintained an uneasy peace, but assassinations of gang leaders in 2020 sparked a power struggle. Since then, the groups have rapidly splintered into factions vying for control of territory, particularly Guayaquil, says Glaeldys González Calanche, a fellow at the International Crisis Group.  Experts said those foreign criminal groups took sides among Ecuador’s gangs, further fueling the turf war. “Los Lobos are believed to be tethered to the Jalisco New Generation Cartel, while Los Choneros are purportedly in alliance with the Sinaloa Cartel,” both out of Mexico, she adds. “Splinter groups are now locked in a fierce competition for control of domestic consumer markets and trafficking routes, further fueling the cycle of violence.” This has all had terrifying effects for the country. 

For years, Ecuador had one of the lowest murder rates in the region, but homicides have more than quadrupled since 2018. Bombings, assassinations, and shootouts have proliferated. In 2022, when headless corpses were found suspended from a bridge in the city of Esmeraldas, some analysts concluded that the kind of cartel violence that terrorized Mexican cities like Juarez in the 2000s had found a new home in Ecuador. Last year, a presidential candidate, who had reportedly received threats from the local affiliates of the Sinaloa cartel, was assassinated

While former President Guillermo Lasso attempted to crack down on gangs, increasing police presence and even deploying the military failed to contain the violence. From 2022 to 2023, Ecuador’s murder rate nearly doubled.  Experts and former local officials say that not only has the government failed to curtail the violence, it may be abetting it as well.  “State actors are facilitating the operation of organized crime,” Botero says, pointing to the attorney general’s raids on the homes of judges, prosecutors, and police last month, which led to the arrest of dozens of officials linked to organized crime, including even a former drug czar and a president of the judicial council. “The state and law enforcement entities cannot control the situation of criminality and violence” he says, because “they are involved with organized crime in the country.” 

This week’s crisis only underscores that point: Experts told Vox it seemed apparent that the prison escape Sunday that prompted Noboa’s emergency declaration was carried out with ease; Choneros kingpin Adolfo “Fito” Macías fled on the very day he was supposed to be transferred to a new maximum security prison. Then on Monday, a leader of the Los Lobos gang, Fabricio Colón, also disappeared from his cell. “The [cartels] actually command the prisons,” says Daniela Chacón, who served as vice mayor of Quito from 2014 to 2016 and as a city councilor from 2014 to 2019, pointing to Fito’s escape. Chacón says recent events are “a show of control and power from organizations that have been already accustomed to running the show the past few years.”

Noboa on Tuesday said Ecuador is in an “internal armed conflict,” issuing a decree that designated over 20 gangs as terrorist groups and authorized Ecuador’s military to “neutralize” them. While Noboa has declared war, Chacón says the military can’t fix institutional corruption, warning: “The armed response will only go so far when you are fighting organizations that have more money, more power, that move more quickly, than the state does.”

“The Ecuadorian people are rightly clamoring for effective, firm government and a state role in quelling this violence and returning what, for most Ecuadoreans, was a sense of peace and security,” says John Walsh, director for drug policy at the Washington Office on Latin America, but he warns that the militarization of Ecuador’s law enforcement might also spawn new threats to security. Fighting organized crime in ways that skirt the rule of law, Walsh argues, “may achieve a short-term semblance of victory, but ultimately it’s serving the aims of those who would destroy and co-opt the state to begin with, and it will leave everybody less secure.” 

Noboa has been vocal about his admiration of Salvadoran President Nayib Bukele, pledging last week to build massive prisons modeled after Bukele’s. Bukele was elected in 2019 promising to end the gang violence epidemic that contributed to El Salvador once having the highest murder rate in the world; he has largely done so via a campaign of mass arrests that has made him domestically popular even as it has been criticized for widespread human rights abuse. Noboa’s state of emergency, which curtails civil liberties, would also seem to take a page out of Bukele’s security policy: The Salvadoran president has extended a similar state of exception since March 2022.

Walsh also points to the failure of militarized approaches in Colombia and Mexico, and warns that “militarized operations put civilian populations at elevated risk of being caught in the crossfire as both sides — the state and organized crime — seek to escalate the conflict.”  Walsh sees Ecuador’s crisis as a regional and international problem, inextricably tied to the global cocaine market. Ecuador has already been transformed. The widespread, coordinated violence and brazen show of force by the country’s gangs this week reveal that Ecuador has already become a new epicenter for drug cartel violence and conflict.  The violence is “starting to be normalized,” says Chacón, the former vice mayor of Quito. “There is this feeling of hopelessness, that the situation will not change.”

Noboa’s declaration of an “internal armed conflict” signals the same militarized approach that failed to stem cartel violence in Mexico and Colombia. Experts say Ecuador needs to first address the systemic corruption and infiltration of state institutions that have allowed gangs to amass their power. And really, Walsh says, a new regional approach that addresses the international nature of narcotrafficking is needed to ensure Ecuador does not continue down the path of spiraling violence that has destabilized its neighbors — including rethinking drug prohibition altogether. “We need to see this as a tragedy that’s not likely to limit itself to Ecuador but may also already be spreading,” Walsh says. “There’s no reason to think Ecuador is where this ends.That should be an extremely sobering thought,” he adds. “And rather than trying to counteract these developments with the tools and strategies that have failed disastrously in the past, we need new ways of thinking and in particular to challenge drug prohibition as an enabler of the organized crime and corruption that we are supposedly trying to tackle.”

https://www.vox.com/world-politics/2024/1/11/24034891/ecuador-drugs-coca...

jerrym

As Ecuador plunges further towards a full narco state, the Ecuadoran prosecutor spearheading the probe into the armed attack on TV station is shot dead. 

https://www.aljazeera.com/news/2024/1/18/ecuador-prosecutor-investigatin...

 

josh

Mexico to immediately suspend diplomatic relations with Ecuador after Ecuadorian police forcibly entered the embassy of Mexico in Quito and detained Jorge Glas in flagrant violation of international law and the sovereignty of Mexico.

https://x.com/camilapress/status/1776471732758466768

NDPP

Ecuador Invades Mexican Embassy - Mexico Cuts Ties (&vid)

https://twitter.com/richimedhurst/status/1776776855573401858

"British journalist Richard Medhurst discusses Ecuador's attack on the Mexican embassy @12:45

Ecuador breaks international law like Israel.

epaulo13

Mexico Cuts Diplomatic Ties with Ecuador After Raid on Mexican Embassy in Quito

Mexico has cut diplomatic ties with Ecuador and withdrawn its embassy personnel from Quito after Ecuadorian police and military forces raided the Mexican Embassy Friday to arrest former Ecuadorian Vice President Jorge Glas, who had taken refuge there for months. Mexico had granted Glas asylum protections just hours before dozens of police and military forces stormed the Mexican Embassy. Glas served under former leftist Ecuadorian President Rafael Correa. Glas is being investigated for corruption and was previously convicted on graft charges, which he and allies have denounced as politically motivated. The raid on Mexico’s Embassy in Quito has sparked condemnation across Latin America and the world. This is Mexican Foreign Minister Alicia Bárcena.

Alicia Bárcena: “Mexico repeats its condemnation of the violation of the immunity of its embassy in Quito and the aggression toward its staff. … As per instructions of President Andrés Manuel López Obrador, we are coordinating the return of all of our diplomatic staff in Ecuador, along with their families, after the violent attack carried out by Ecuadorian police in our embassy on the night of Friday, April 5th.”