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Tag: Ecuador

  • US warships’ Caribbean mission will divert drugs to the Pacific, experts warn

    (CNN) — The deployment of US warships in the Caribbean to counter drug-trafficking could simply divert the problem to the Pacific, experts in the region warn.

    While much attention has focused on the political tension between the United States and Venezuela – even more so after a strike on an alleged Venezuelan drug boat on Tuesday – security specialists warn that the focus on Caribbean trafficking routes by American ships could have serious, unintended consequences for countries struggling to prevent drug flows on the Pacific corridor – such as Ecuador, Peru and Colombia.

    “What’s going to happen is that, by blocking this Caribbean corridor, drug traffickers will avoid continuing to transport drugs through that route, because it’s more dangerous, and they’ll incur greater losses. They’ll redirect the flow of drugs,” former Ecuadorian Army Intelligence chief Mario Pazmiño told CNN.

    Ecuador is one of the most violent countries in Latin America due to transnational organized crime and has the third-highest drug seizures after the United States and Colombia, according to the UN Office on Drugs and Crime.

    Various drug trafficking routes operate from the South American country to Central America, the United States and Europe, where a series of Ecuadorian, Colombian, Mexican and European criminal networks converge.

    Pazmiño thinks these routes will get only more popular with traffickers as the Caribbean routes are squeezed off.

    “This flow of drugs will no longer leave through Colombia or Venezuela. They will try to use Ecuadorian ports, which are one of our country’s greatest weaknesses and through which drugs are constantly leaving,” he warned.

    Indeed, Pazmiño believes this effect is already in play.

    On August 25, Ecuador’s Guayaquil Port Authority declared a state of emergency due to rising insecurity and constant extortion threats, which it claims are putting the integrity of the port infrastructure and personnel at risk.

    “The facilities of the Guayaquil Port Authority, as well as the personnel working there, are in imminent danger, given that threats have been made to kidnap the crew and pilots and attack vessels,” it said.

    Pazmiño believes the situation is closely linked to the military tension in Caribbean waters, and shows the ability of transnational crime to divert its trafficking routes.

    The Ecuadorian Navy recently reported that it has intensified its patrols and military operations against drug traffickers.

    On August 24, authorities seized 10 tons of drugs with the help of the US Coast Guard, which is providing support under military agreements signed in 2023.

    Traffickers ‘take advantage’ as threat to Maduro grows

    Daniel Pontón, an expert in criminal policy and crime control at Ecuador’s Institute of Advanced National Studies, said that controlling the Pacific corridor was becoming a much more complex task.

    “Drug traffickers know how to take advantage of any moment or vulnerability. Ecuador and other countries in the region need capabilities and cooperation. Joint action is required because the Navy’s capacity is limited,” Pontón added.

    Meanwhile, Michelle Maffei, a researcher on international organized crime, conflict, and violence, warned that militarizing the fight against criminal gangs could have the opposite effect to what is intended.

    “What this will force is another political conflict. It won’t be a strategy against organized crime. The United States is focused on the Maduro government (in Venezuela). While they’re focused on removing Maduro, the illegal and criminal economy will move more drugs, using semi-submersible vessels or contaminated containers with greater vigor, because they know their focus is on something else,” warns Maffei.

    Maffei said authorities should instead focus on fighting corruption.

    “We need to implement a radical reform of the judicial system in Ecuador. We have prosecutors who don’t work, judges who are bought off, and lawyers who are also bought off by organized crime groups. If this doesn’t happen in Ecuador, nothing good will come of it,” she added.

    Pazmiño also had suggestions for how to combat the problem: “Strengthening the northern border with Colombia, creating a joint task force to cover the entire northern border and making it difficult and impossible for cocaine to spill into Ecuadorian territory.”

    Even without increased drug flows, Ecuador is experiencing severe internal violence and recently reported record homicide numbers amid fighting between organized crime gangs. So far this year, the Ministry of the Interior has recorded 5,268 intentional homicides. In 2024, the year ended with 7,062 violent deaths. In 2023, there were 8,248.

    The Daniel Noboa administration has called on the international community to support the fight against transnational crime.

    But while the region’s eyes are focused on the Caribbean Sea, experts hope this will not lead to an increase in violence and mafia activity in the key areas of cocaine trafficking in the Pacific.

    Ana Maria Canizares and CNN

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  • Bread and Roses Festival rooted in strength, solidarity

    LAWRENCE — Labor Day’s Bread and Roses Heritage Festival will rally in the face of adversity, pull from the past and prepare for the future.

    At the 41st festival Monday from 11:30 a.m. to 6 p.m. at Campagnone North Common, visitors will join circle discussions revolving around strength and solidarity.


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    By Terry Date | tdate@eagletribune.com

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  • Ecuador’s youngest mayor, Brigitte Garcia, and her adviser are found shot to death inside car

    Ecuador’s youngest mayor, Brigitte Garcia, and her adviser are found shot to death inside car

    Ecuador’s youngest mayor was found shot to death Sunday, police said, as the South American country approaches its third month of a state of emergency decreed by the government to crack down on soaring gang violence.

    Brigitte Garcia, the 27-year-old mayor of coastal San Vicente, was found dead along with her adviser, the municipality’s communications director, Jairo Loor.

    During the early hours of the morning “two people were identified inside a vehicle without vital signs, with gunshot wounds,” the Ecuadoran national police said on social media.

    Later, it added that the shots “were not fired from the outside of the vehicle but from the inside.” Investigators are still analyzing the route taken by the car, which had been rented.

    Luisa Gonzalez, the party’s presidential candidate in the recent elections, called Garcia’s killing an assassination.

    “I’ve just found out they’ve assassinated our fellow mayor of San Vicente Brigitte Garcia,” Gonzalez said in a post.

    mayor-yqpchxca-400x400.jpg
    Brigitte Garcia

    twitter.com/melabrigitte


    One of Garcia’s last posts on social media, where she touts herself as the nation’s youngest mayor, was about a new project to bring water to her municipality.

    “Together, we’re building a brighter future for our community,” she wrote on Thursday.

    In January, President Daniel Noboa imposed a state of emergency and declared the country in “a state of war” against gangs after a wave of violence following the prison escape of “Los Choneros” leader Adolfo “Fito” Macias.

    That month, Noboa also gave orders to “neutralize” criminal gangs after gunmen stormed and opened fire in a TV studio and bandits threatened random executions of civilians and security forces.

    Since then, the military has been deployed in the streets and taken control of the country’s prisons, where a string of gang riots in recent years has left some 460 people killed.

    The government claims that its so-called “Phoenix Plan” has been successful at reducing the country’s soaring violence.

    Security forces have carried out some 165,000 operations, made more than 12,000 arrests, killed 15 people considered “terrorists” and seized some 65 tons of drugs since January, according to official figures.

    But several violent episodes were reported over the weekend, including the ambush of an army patrol in Sucumbios, a province on the Colombian border. One soldier was killed and three others wounded in the incident.

    In the Andean city of Latacunga, a bomb threat prompted police to evacuate a stadium where a professional soccer championship game was being held.

    After an inspection with the help of a trained dog, authorities found a suitcase in the parking lot of the stadium “containing five explosive charges,” which were detonated in a controlled manner, according to a police report.

    The government said it would reinforce security controls following Garcia’s assassination.

    Once considered a bastion of peace in Latin America, Ecuador has been plunged into crisis after years of expansion by transnational cartels that use its ports to ship drugs to the United States and Europe.

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  • “Spidermen” narcos use ropes in Ecuador’s biggest port to hide drugs on ships bound for the U.S. and Europe

    “Spidermen” narcos use ropes in Ecuador’s biggest port to hide drugs on ships bound for the U.S. and Europe

    At Guayaquil, Ecuador’s biggest port and export hub, drug gangs and the coast guard play a cat-and-mouse game, vying for supremacy of the river among the many hidden inlets and tangles of mangrove. One officer says that some of the drug traffickers are so adept at scaling ships and covertly planting drugs on them that they are like “spidermen.”

    The Guayas Estuary, with its 28 ports, is the heart of the violence-torn country’s economy.

    Excluding oil, 80 percent of Ecuador’s exports pass through here, including key products such as bananas and shrimp.

    It is also the main export channel for drugs.

    “Seventy percent of the cocaine that arrives in Europe comes from Ecuador, and 80 percent of this cocaine comes out of Guayaquil,” navy coast guard commander Fernando Alvarez, whose unit is at the forefront of the fight against trafficking, told AFP.

    According to Alvarez, Ecuador has become the main cocaine distributor in the world, with most of the drugs originating in neighbors Colombia and Peru — the world’s top producers of cocaine.

    ECUADOR-STATE OF EMERGENCY-SECURITY
    Members of the Coast Guard Command (COGUAR) of the Ecuadorian Navy prepares to go on a patrol along tributary channels of the Guayas River next to port terminals while participating in an anti-drug trafficking patrol in Guayaquil, Ecuador on January 14, 2024. 

    YURI CORTEZ/AFP via Getty Images


    Daily, Alvarez and his team patrol the Guayas River.

    To the right of them is a forest of mangroves shielding shrimp farms. To the left, miserable poverty-stricken neighborhoods in which gangs rule with an iron fist.

    And in the middle of the water lane, a massive container ship about six stories high — the perfect vessel for a hidden drug stash.

    “These criminals are real spidermen”

    The coast guards’ job is a complicated one.

    On the one hand, they have to look out for speed boats, semi-submersibles (also known as “narco subs”) and even submarines now employed by ever-wealthier drug traffickers along the nearly 46-mile channel that connects Guayaquil to the open sea.

    “The whole city is connected via canals. It is a very, very complicated task to control all this,” one officer told AFP on condition of anonymity for fear of being targeted.

    Another threat is criminals who bring drugs from ashore in canoes or small boats, use ropes or ladders to clamber up the sides of tankers and container ships bound for the United States or Europe, and hide the contraband there.

    “These criminals are real spidermen,” said the anonymous officer.

    “There are mangroves everywhere, it’s very easy to hide,” he added.

    The intruders, some of whom pose as fishermen, usually act under the cover of darkness, sometimes with the complicity of the crew, according to the coast guard.

    “If there is a risk of ‘contamination,’ we board with a tactical group to protect the ship,” said Alvarez.

    Shipping companies increasingly also rely on protection from private security escorts.

    Gangs “don’t hesitate to open fire”

    According to Alvarez, the gangs often follow the vessels carrying their illicit goods, and “do not hesitate to open fire” if they spot anyone on their tail.

    “They are ever more violent. They adapt constantly” — also trying to buy off members of the security forces.

    The gangs are in cahoots with three major transnational traffickers: Mexico’s Sinaloa and Jalisco New Generation cartels — which are behind the influx of fentanyl into the U.S. that’s killing tens of thousands of Americans — as well as Albanian groups with ties to Italy’s notorious ‘Ndrangheta mafia.

    Alvarez said about 80 percent of crimes intercepted by his unit nowadays are related to drugs.

    The same patrols are also tasked with securing the waterway to the protected Galapagos archipelago from illegal Chinese and Spanish fishing fleets.

    And while the task is sometimes overwhelming, the state of emergency declared last week to put down a violent gang uprising “has changed things in our favor,” said Alvarez.

    “It has changed the rules on the use of force, and since these gangs are now considered fighting forces, this allows us to respond more robustly.”

    Ecuador government and drug cartels at war

    Once a bastion of peace, Ecuador has recently been plunged into crisis after years of expansion by transnational cartels.

    The latest violence was triggered by the escape from Guayaquil prison just over a week ago of one of the country’s most powerful narcotics gang bosses.

    The government declared a state of emergency and countrywide curfew, infuriating gangsters who declared war against civilians and security forces, launching several deadly attacks and taking dozens of hostages. Most have since been freed.

    By Sunday, Ecuador’s security forces said they had taken control of several prisons back from gangs and reported more than 1,300 arrests, 27 escaped inmates recaptured and eight gangsters, whom the government describes as “terrorists,” killed.

    Ecuadorian soldiers take control of the prison, in Cuenca
    Ecuadorian soldiers stand guard over inmates in the courtyard after taking control of the Ceunca prison, in Cuenca, Ecuador, in a handout picture made available on Jan. 14, 2024.

    Armed Forces of Ecuador/Handout/REUTERS


    For year, much of the violence has concentrated in prisons, where clashes between inmates have left more than 460 dead, many beheaded or burnt alive, since February 2021.

    Last week, hundreds of soldiers patrolled near-deserted streets in Ecuador’s capital after the government and drug mafias declared war on each other, leaving residents gripped with fear.

    The small South American country has been plunged into crisis after years of growing control by transnational cartels who use its ports to ship cocaine to the U.S. and Europe.

    President Daniel Noboa, 36, gave orders last week to “neutralize” criminal gangs after gunmen stormed and opened fire in a TV studio and bandits threatened random executions of civilians and security forces. Less than two months after taking office, he declared the country in a state of “internal armed conflict.”

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  • Archeologists Uncover Lost Cities Of Amazon Rainforest That Were Once Home To Thousands

    Archeologists Uncover Lost Cities Of Amazon Rainforest That Were Once Home To Thousands

    WASHINGTON (AP) — Archeologists have uncovered a cluster of lost cities in the Amazon rainforest that was home to at least 10,000 farmers around 2,000 years ago.

    A series of earthen mounds and buried roads in Ecuador was first noticed more than two decades ago by archaeologist Stéphen Rostain. But at the time, “I wasn’t sure how it all fit together,” said Rostain, one of the researchers who reported on the finding Thursday in the journal Science.

    Recent mapping by laser-sensor technology revealed those sites to be part of a dense network of settlements and connecting roadways, tucked into the forested foothills of the Andes, that lasted about 1,000 years.

    “It was a lost valley of cities,” said Rostain, who directs investigations at France’s National Center for Scientific Research. “It’s incredible.”

    The settlements were occupied by the Upano people between around 500 B.C. and 300 to 600 A.D. — a period roughly contemporaneous with the Roman Empire in Europe, the researchers found.

    Residential and ceremonial buildings erected on more than 6,000 earthen mounds were surrounded by agricultural fields with drainage canals. The largest roads were 33 feet (10 meters) wide and stretched for 6 to 12 miles (10 to 20 kilometers).

    While it’s difficult to estimate populations, the site was home to at least 10,000 inhabitants — and perhaps as many as 15,000 or 30,000 at its peak, said archaeologist Antoine Dorison, a study co-author at the same French institute.

    That’s comparable to the estimated population of Roman-era London, then Britain’s largest city.

    “This shows a very dense occupation and an extremely complicated society,” said University of Florida archeologist Michael Heckenberger, who was not involved in the study. “For the region, it’s really in a class of its own in terms of how early it is.”

    José Iriarte, a University of Exeter archaeologist, said it would have required an elaborate system of organized labor to build the roads and thousands of earthen mounds.

    “The Incas and Mayans built with stone, but people in Amazonia didn’t usually have stone available to build — they built with mud. It’s still an immense amount of labor,” said Iriarte, who had no role in the research.

    The Amazon is often thought of as a “pristine wilderness with only small groups of people. But recent discoveries have shown us how much more complex the past really is,” he said.

    Scientists have recently also found evidence of intricate rainforest societies that predated European contact elsewhere in the Amazon, including in Bolivia and in Brazil.

    “There’s always been an incredible diversity of people and settlements in the Amazon, not only one way to live,” said Rostain. “We’re just learning more about them.”

    The Associated Press Health and Science Department receives support from the Howard Hughes Medical Institute’s Science and Educational Media Group. The AP is solely responsible for all content.

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  • Masked men storm TV studio waving guns as 'internal conflict' engulfs Ecuador

    Masked men storm TV studio waving guns as 'internal conflict' engulfs Ecuador

    HOODED gunmen have hijacked a live television broadcast in Ecuador and threatened staff members.

    Live television footage broadcast from Ecuador’s TC station in Guayaquil showed hooded gunmen storming the set, waving guns and threatening people.

    8

    Hooded gunmen have stormed a live television broadcast in EcuadorCredit: EPA
    Images have surfaced of blood on the floor of the studio

    8

    Images have surfaced of blood on the floor of the studioCredit: AFP
    Some of the gunmen have been arrested

    8

    Some of the gunmen have been arrestedCredit: AFP

    Shots could be heard as some of the gunmen told staff members to lie on the ground.

    Some members of the group were also seen pointing at the cameras and shouting “no police”, before the live feed was cut.

    Another gunman was reportedly heard saying: “We are on the air so that they know we do not play with the mafia”.

    While a hooded man has been alleged to have left a stick of dynamite in the television station’s reception area.

    Specialised police units from both Quito and Guayaquil were quickly deployed to the scene.

    They have since shared footage of blood on the floor of the television studio, alongside images of some of the arrests that they made.

    Police commander Csar Zapata told the TV channel Teleamazonas that officers seized the guns and explosives the gunmen had with them. He didn’t say how many people were arrested.

    But he did say that this is an act that should be considered as a terrorist act.

    Armed men have also entered the University of Guayaquil, attempting to kidnap students, and Teodoro Maldonado hospital, where they have been attempting to kidnap doctors.

    Shots have been heard in both locations, and an evacuation order has been issued at the Carondelet presidential complex in Quito.

    These shocking incidences come just a day after Ecuadorian President Daniel Noboa had to declare a state of emergency after a notorious drug kingpin escaped from a maximum security jail on Sunday.

    Several police officers were kidnapped immediately after the announcement, and there have been a series of explosions across the country.

    The security situation has now deteriorated to the point where President Noboa has declared the existence of an internal armed conflict in Ecuador.

    In his statement he has provided a decree for the direct intervention of the Armed Forces.

    “I have just signed the state of exception decree so that the Armed Forces have all the political and legal support in their actions,” Noboa said on Instagram.

    Adolfo Macias, the leader of the Los Choneros gang, had been serving a 34-year sentence for drug trafficking and murder.

    Los Choneros is one of the Ecuadorian gangs that the authorities have deemed responsible for the spike in violence over the last year – which saw the assassination of presidential candidate Fernando Villavicencio.

    It has also been claimed that Los Choneros has links with Mexico’s infamous Sinaloa cartel.

    The whereabouts of Adolfo Macias remains unclear, but two prison guards have had charged filed against them.

    The TV studio raid is being blamed on another gang called Los Tiguerones which has been linked to the kidnap of British millionaire businessman Colin Armstrong last month.

    The 78-year-old former honorary consul for Guayaquil, president of Ecuadorian agricultural distribution firm Agripac, was released on December 20.

    He had been taken hostage four days earlier with his Colombian girlfriend Katherine Paola Santos after being was snatched from a farm he owned. Nine suspects were subsequently arrested.

    Noboa was elected in October on the promise to crack down on violent crime. He has vowed to take back control of the country’s prisons and the country’s streets.

    His updated state of emergency has recognised several criminal gangs, like Los Choneros, as terrorist groups, and has ordered the armed forces to quell them.

    The decree has allowed Noboa to set a national curfew, from 11pm to 5am, which he has coupled with military patrols – on the streets and inside prisons.

    He has adamantly stated that he will not negotiate with “terrorists”, that he won’t stop until he brings back peace to all Ecuadorians, and that his government had decided to confront crime.

    The Ecuadorian police have been given new powers under Noboa's state of emergency

    8

    The Ecuadorian police have been given new powers under Noboa’s state of emergencyCredit: AFP
    President Noboa has said that he won't stop until peace is returned to Ecuador

    8

    President Noboa has said that he won’t stop until peace is returned to EcuadorCredit: Reuters
    The police are yet to reveal how many armed men they arrested

    8

    The police are yet to reveal how many armed men they arrestedCredit: Reuters
    Police were able to storm the television studio quickly and rescue staff members

    8

    Police were able to storm the television studio quickly and rescue staff membersCredit: Getty
    Most staff members were escorted off the premises after 30 minutes

    8

    Most staff members were escorted off the premises after 30 minutesCredit: AFP

    Neha Dhillon

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  • Ecuador’s drug lords are building “narco-zoos” as status symbols. The animals are paying the price.

    Ecuador’s drug lords are building “narco-zoos” as status symbols. The animals are paying the price.

    A pair of jaguars discovered in a cage on a ranch exposed a cruel new fashion among Ecuador’s drug lords. In the style of Colombian cocaine baron Pablo Escobar, they are erecting private, illegal zoos as a status symbol.

    In May, police came upon the sorry sight of the two endangered felines perched on a log surrounded by iron bars.

    They were held on a property owned by Wilder Sanchez Farfan — alias “Gato” (The Cat) — a suspected drug lord with ties to Mexico’s Jalisco New Generation cartel and wanted in the United States.

    Farfan was arrested in Colombia in February, and the U.S. Treasury Department called him “one of the most significant drug traffickers in the world.”

    Along with the jaguars, police have also found parrots, parakeets and other exotic birds Farfan is believed to have imported from China and South Korea.  

    ECUADOR-DRUGS-TRAFFICKING-ZOO-ANIMALS
    A margay, a small spotted cat, is seen at the TUERI Wildlife Hospital, created by the San Francisco University of San Francisco de Quito (USFQ), in Quito on October 2, 2023, after it was seized in a rural area of the Ecuadorean capital by the Environment Ministry and taken to this center for evaluation.

    GALO PAGUAY/AFP via Getty Images


    The “narco zoo” phenomenon is a relatively new one that coincides with the rise of an underground drug industry in Ecuador in the last few years, said Darwin Robles, head of the police’s Environmental Protection Unit (UPMA).  

    “Where there is drug trafficking, you can be sure that there will be… wildlife trafficking,” he told AFP.  

    The purpose? “To demonstrate their power, their purchasing power, their economic capacity,” said Robles.  

    Police seized more than 6,800 wild animals in 2022 and nearly 6,000 in 2021 in Ecuador, one of the world’s most biodiverse countries.  

    The South American country, wedged between major cocaine producers Colombia and Peru, recently went from being a mere transit stop to a drug trafficking hub in its own right, with a correlated explosion in violent crime.

    The jaguars and birds found at Farfan’s property were taken to rehabilitation centers to receive medical and other attention.

    But in most cases, a return to their natural habitat has been impossible.  

    Police have also found turtles, snakes, furs and animal heads on other drug kingpins’ properties.

    “Having an animal is a status symbol… It demonstrates an individual’s rank within a network” of organized crime, an official for the US-based Wildlife Conservation Society (WCS) told AFP.  

    The official asked not to be named for fear of reprisal from trafficking groups.  

    Owning a spotted cat, for example, is a start, but having a jaguar is much more prestigious — just like expansive properties, luxury cars, works of art or jewelry, the official explained.

    In Ecuador, wildlife trafficking is punishable by up to three years in prison — much less than in many of its neighbors.

    After Escobar was gunned down by police in 1993, his private collection of flamingos, giraffes, zebras and kangaroos were placed in zoos.  

    But a herd of hippopotamuses — dubbed “cocaine hippos” — was left to fend for itself, reproducing unchecked and now posing a major headache for environmental authorities.

    Independent journalist Audrey Huse, who has lived in Colombia for eight years, told CBS News that in the 1980s, Escobar imported just four hippos. The hippo numbers exploded and there are now about 160 of the two-ton beasts wandering freely around this part of northwestern Colombia.

    “Because they have no natural predators here, as they would in Africa, the population is booming an it’s affecting the local ecosystem,” Huse said. “Because they are such large animals, they consume considerable amounts of grassland and produce significant waste, which then poisons the rivers.”

    There are fears Ecuador’s drug lords will leave a similarly negative environmental footprint.

    At the Tueri wildlife hospital in Quito, wild cats, monkeys, porcupines, parrots and owls receive treatment after falling victim to trafficking. Many arrive underfed or injured.  

    ECUADOR-DRUGS-TRAFFICKING-ZOO-ANIMALS
    A Central American squirrel monkey (Saimiri sciureus), is seen at the TUERI Wildlife Hospital, created by the San Francisco University of San Francisco de Quito (USFQ), in Quito on October 2, 2023, after it was seized in the northern area of the Ecuadorean capital by the Environment Ministry and taken to this center for evaluation. 

    GALO PAGUAY/AFP via Getty Images


    Only about one in five recover sufficiently to return to their natural home, say clinic staff.

    Many don’t survive the ordeal. Others will live out their days in shelters as they no longer know how to live in the wild.

    Traffickers do not understand the harm they are wreaking, said the WCS official.  

    “To have a monkey at your house, it means you caused a hunter to kill its family,” explained the official.

    Last year, a monkey in a “bullet-proof” vest was found dead after a bloody cartel shootout in Mexico

    One of the shelters that receives animals that cannot be rewilded, is the Jardin Alado Ilalo in Quito.

    “We have animals that arrive with their wings amputated, their claws amputated and a fundamental damage that is psychological damage,” said Cecilia Guana, who takes care of parrots and other birds at the center.

    “These birds no longer identify themselves as animals in their natural state… and have to stay in places like these.”

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  • Prisoners in Ecuador take 57 guards and police hostage as car bombs rock the capital

    Prisoners in Ecuador take 57 guards and police hostage as car bombs rock the capital

    Ecuador’s was rocked by a series of car bombings and the hostage-taking of more than 50 law enforcement officers inside various prisons Thursday, just weeks after the country was shaken by the assassination of a presidential candidate. Ecuador’s National Police reported no injuries resulting from the four explosions in Quito, the capital, and in a province that borders Peru, while Interior Minister Juan Zapata said none of the law enforcement officers taken hostage in six different prisons had been injured.

    Authorities said the brazen actions were the response of criminal groups to the relocation of various inmates and other measures taken by the country’s corrections system. The crimes happened three weeks after the slaying of presidential candidate Fernando Villavicencio.

    ECUADOR-CRIME-BOMBING
    Policemen inspect the wreckage of a car after it exploded in Quito on August 31, 2023. A car bomb exploded in a commercial area of Ecuador’s capital without causing casualties, police said, as the country experiences an increase in violence linked to drug trafficking.

    RODRIGO BUENDIA/AFP via Getty


    The corrections system, known as the National Service for Attention to Persons Deprived of Liberty, has in recent years lost control of large prisons, which have been the site of violent riots resulting in dozens of deaths. It has taken to transferring inmates to manage gang-related disputes.

    In Quito, the first bomb went off Wednesday night in an area where an office of the country’s corrections system was previously located. The second explosion in the capital happened early Thursday outside the agency’s current base.

    Ecuador National Police Gen. Pablo Ramírez, the national director of anti-drug investigations, told reporters on Thursday that police found gas cylinders, fuel, fuses and blocks of dynamite among the debris of the crime scenes in Quito, where the first vehicle to explode was a small car and the second was a pickup truck.

    Authorities said gas tanks were used in the explosions in the El Oro communities of Casacay and Bella India.

    The fire department in the city of Cuenca, where one of the prisons in which law enforcement officers are being held hostage is located, reported that an explosive device went off Thursday night. The department did not provide additional details beyond saying the explosion damaged a car.

    Zapata said seven of prison hostages are police officers and the rest are prison guards. In a video shared on social media, which Zapata identified as authentic, a police officer who identifies himself as Lt. Alonso Quintana asks authorities “not to make decisions that violate the rights of persons deprived of their liberty.” He can be seen surrounded by a group of police and corrections officers and says that about 30 people are being held by the inmates.

    Ecuadorian authorities attribute the country’s spike in violence over the past three years to a power vacuum triggered by the killing in 2020 of Jorge Zambrano, alias “Rasquiña” or “JL,” the leader of the local Los Choneros gang. Members carry out contract killings, run extortion operations, move and sell drugs, and rule prisons.

    Los Choneros and similar groups linked to Mexican and Colombian cartels are fighting over drug-trafficking routes and control of territory, including within detention facilities, where at least 400 inmates have died since 2021.

    Villavicencio, the presidential candidate, had a famously tough stance on organized crime and corruption. He was killed Aug. 9 at the end of a political rally in Quito despite having a security detail that included police and bodyguards.

    He had accused Los Choneros and its imprisoned current leader Adolfo Macías, alias “Fito,” whom he linked to Mexico’s Sinaloa cartel, of threatening him and his campaign team days before the assassination.

    Ecuador’s Security Secretary, Wagner Bravo, told FMundo radio station that six prisoners who were relocated may have been involved in Villavicencio’s slaying.

    The mayor of Quito, Pabel Muñoz, told the Teleamazonas television station that he was hoping “for justice to act quickly, honestly and forcefully.”

    “We are not going to give up. May peace, calm and security prevail among the citizens,” Muñoz said.

    The country’s National Police tallied 3,568 violent deaths in the first six months of this year, far more than the 2,042 reported during the same period in 2022. That year ended with 4,600 violent deaths, the country’s highest in history and double the total in 2021.

    The port city of Guayaquil has been the epicenter of violence, but Esmeraldas, a Pacific coastal city, is also considered one of the country’s most dangerous. There, six government vehicles were set on fire earlier this week, according to authorities.

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  • Ecuador votes to stop oil drilling in the Amazon reserve in

    Ecuador votes to stop oil drilling in the Amazon reserve in

    Ecuadorans have voted to stop an oil drilling project in an Amazon reserve, according to the results Monday of a referendum hailed as a historic example of climate democracy.

    The “Yes” vote to halt exploitation of an oil block in the Yasuni National Park, one of the most diverse biospheres in the world, won by 59 percent, with 98 percent of votes tallied.

    “Today Ecuador takes a giant step to protect life, biodiversity, and indigenous people,” the country’s two main indigenous organizations, Confeniae and Conaie, posted on social media.

    Ecuador Election
    A voter carries the ballot for a referendum on whether the country should ban oil operations in the Amazons during in a snap election in Quito, Ecuador, Sunday, Aug. 20, 2023.

    Carlos Noriega / AP


    After years of demands for a referendum, the country’s highest court authorized the vote in May to decide the fate of “block 43,” which contributes 12 percent of the 466,000 barrels of oil per day produced by Ecuador.

    The block is situated in a reserve which stretches over one million hectares and is home to three of the world’s last uncontacted Indigenous populations and a bounty of plant and animal species.

    Drilling began in 2016 after years of fraught debate and failed efforts by then president Rafael Correa to persuade the international community to pay cash-strapped Ecuador $3.6 billion not to drill there.

    The government of outgoing President Guillermo Lasso has estimated a loss of $16 billion over the next 20 years if drilling is halted.

    The reserve is home to the Waorani and Kichwa tribes, as well as the Tagaeri, Taromenane and Dugakaeri, who choose to live isolated from the modern world.

    National oil company Petroecuador had permission to exploit 300 hectares, but says it is only using 80 hectares.

    The Amazon basin — which stretches across eight nations — is a vital carbon sink.

    Scientists warn its destruction is pushing the world’s biggest rainforest close to a tipping point, beyond which trees would die off and release carbon rather than absorb it, with catastrophic consequences for the climate.

    The fate of the reserve has drawn the attention of celebrities such as Hollywood star and environmental activist Leonardo DiCaprio.

    “With this first-of-its-kind referendum worldwide, Ecuador could become an example in democratizing climate politics, offering voters the chance to vote not just for the forest but also for Indigenous rights, our climate, and the well-being of our planet,” he wrote on Instagram this month.

    Swedish climate campaigner Greta Thunberg also hailed the “historic referendum.”

    The NGO Amazon Frontlines said the vote was a “demonstration of climate democracy, where people, not corporations, get to decide on resource extraction and its limits.”

    Locals in Yasuni were divided, with some supporting the oil companies and the benefits that economic growth have brought to their villages.

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  • Ecuador election heads to run-off vote, with González to face surprise second-place Noboa | CNN

    Ecuador election heads to run-off vote, with González to face surprise second-place Noboa | CNN



    CNN
     — 

    Luisa González, of the Movimiento Revolución Ciudadana party, on Sunday took a lead in the first round of Ecuador’s presidential and legislative elections, which have been marred by political assassinations as the Andean nation struggles with a wave of violence that has brought homicide rates to record levels.

    Gonzalez is set to face the surprise second-place finisher Daniel Noboa in a run-off election in October, according to the National Electoral Council of Ecuador (CNE), as neither candidate won more than 50% of the ballot.

    “These preliminary results already show a trend that guarantees that Ecuadorians will go to a run-off on October 15,” CNE president Diana Atamaint said Sunday.

    González is seen as a protégé of former leftist President Rafael Correa – who still wields great influence in the country and has supported her run from exile in Belgium. The former president was sentenced in absentia in 2020 to eight years in prison for aggravated bribery, a charge he has repeatedly denied.

    González has promised to enhance public spending and social programs and wants to address the security crisis by fixing the root causes of violence, such as poverty and inequality. A former tourism and labor minister in Correa’s government, González has also called for the judiciary to be reinforced to help with prosecutions, analysts say.

    Daniel Noboa is the son of banana businessman Álvaro Noboa – who himself has run for the presidency at least five times. The 35-year-old was a lawmaker before outgoing President Guillermo Lasso dissolved the legislature and called for early elections.

    The centrist, from the Accion Democratica Nacional party, has pledged to create more work opportunities for the young, bring in more foreign investment, and has suggested several anti-corruption measures including sentences for tax evasion.

    Crime has topped the agenda of this year’s presidential race, which was punctuated by the assassination of presidential candidate Fernando Villavicencio, an outspoken anti-corruption journalist.

    His killing has put a spotlight on a recent escalation of violence, fueled by a cocaine boom, which has seen transnational criminal organizations and local gangs engage in high-level graft and extortion, overrun prisons, and murder anyone who gets in their way.

    Days after Villavicencio’s murder, a left-wing local party official, Pedro Briones, was shot dead in Esmeraldas province.

    Gunfire interrupted Noboa’s caravan on Thursday as he was traveling in Guayas province, but authorities say the presidential candidate was not the target of the incident.

    Candidates wore bulletproof vests on election day while security forces were stationed outside polling stations amid threats of violence.

    Villavicencio’s replacement, Christian Zurita, cast his vote in the capital Quito surrounded by heavy security protection from Ecuador’s police and armed forces.

    A different threat, however, emerged on Sunday when authorities reported cyberattacks from several countries, including Russia, Ukraine, China and Bangladesh, on the country’s telematic voting platform. The attack affected access to the vote, the country’s National Electoral Council said, but it added that votes recorded were not violated.

    The mounting violence and lack of economic prospects have compelled many Ecuadorians to leave the country.

    But the winner of October’s run-off vote will have relatively little time to work on a solution. They will hold office only until 2025, which would have been the end of Lasso’s six-year term – a short time frame for even the most seasoned politician to turn things around in the country, experts say.

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  • Ecuador votes in historic referendum on oil extraction in the Amazon | CNN

    Ecuador votes in historic referendum on oil extraction in the Amazon | CNN



    CNN
     — 

    The people of Ecuador are heading to the polls – but they’re voting for more than just a new president. For the first time in history, the people will decide the fate of oil extraction in the Ecuadorian Amazon.

    The referendum will give voters the chance to decide whether oil companies can continue to drill in one of the most biodiverse places on the planet, the Yasuní National Park, home to the last uncontacted indigenous communities in Ecuador.

    The park encompasses around one million hectares at the meeting point of the Amazon, the Andes and the Equator. Just one hectare of Yasuní land supposedly contains more animal species than the whole of Europe and more tree species than exist in all of North America.

    But underneath the land lies Ecuador’s largest reserve of crude oil.

    “We are leading the world in tackling climate change by bypassing politicians and democratizing environmental decisions,” said Pedro Bermo, the spokesman for Yasunidos, an environmental collective who pushed for the referendum.

    It’s been a decade-long battle that began when former President Rafael Correa boldly proposed that the international community give Ecuador $3.6 billion to leave Yasuní undisturbed. But the world wasn’t as generous as Correa expected. In 2016, the Ecuadorian state oil company began drilling in Block 43 – around 0.01% of the National Park – which today produces more than 55,000 barrels a day, amounting to around 12% of Ecuador’s oil production.

    Aerial picture of the Tiputini Processing Center of state-owned Petroecuador in Yasuni National Park, June 21, 2023.

    A continuous crusade of relentless campaigning and a successful petition eventually made its mark – in May, the country’s constitutional court authorized the vote to be included on the ballot of the upcoming election.

    It’s a decision that will likely be instrumental to the future of Ecuador’s economy. Supporters who want to continue drilling believe the loss of employment opportunities would be disastrous.

    “The backers of the request for crude to remain underground made it ten years ago when there wasn’t anything. 10 years later we find ourselves with 55,000 barrels per day, that’s 20 million barrels per year,” Energy Minister Fernando Santos told local radio.

    “At $60 a barrel that’s $1.2 billion,” he added. “It could cause huge damage to the country,” he said, referring to economic damage and denying there has been environmental harm.

    Alberto Acosta-Burneo, an economist and editor of the Weekly Analysis bulletin, said Ecuador would be “shooting itself in the foot” if it shut down drilling. In a video posted on X, formerly known as Twitter, he said that without cutting consumption all it would mean is another country selling Ecuador fuel.

    But ‘yes’ campaigners have ideas to fill the gap, from the promotion of eco-tourism and the electrification of public transport to eliminating tax exemptions. They claim that cutting the subsidies to the richest 10% of the country would generate four times more than what is obtained extracting oil from Yasuní.

    “This election has two faces,” explained Bermo.

    “On one hand we have the violence, the candidates, parties, and the same political mafias that governed Ecuador without significant changes.

    “On the other hand, the referendum is the contrary – a citizen campaign full of hope, joy, art, activism and a lot of collective work to save this place. We are very optimistic.”

    Among those campaigning to stop the drilling is Helena Gualinga, an indigenous rights advocate who hails from a remote village in the Ecuadorian Amazon – home of the Kichwa Sarayaku community.

    A crude oil sample taken from an oil well in Yasuní National Park, where the referendum vote could mean leaving the crude oil in the ground indefinitely.

    “This referendum presents a huge opportunity for us to create change in a tangible way,” she told CNN.

    For Gualinga, the most crucial part of the referendum is that if Yasunidos wins, the state oil company will have a one-year deadline to wrap up its operations in Block 43.

    She explained that some oil companies have left areas in the Amazon without properly shutting down operations and restoring the area.

    “This sentence would mean they have to do that.”

    Those who wish to continue drilling in the area argue that meeting the one-year deadline to dismantle operations would be impossible.

    The referendum comes as the world faces blistering temperatures, with scientists declaring July as the hottest month on record, and the Amazon approaching what studies are suggesting is a critical tipping point that could have severe implications in the fight to tackle climate change.

    And according to Antonia Juhasz, a Senior Researcher on Fossil Fuels, it’s time for Ecuador to transition to a post-oil era. Ecuador’s GDP from oil has dropped significantly from around 18% in 2008, to just over 6% in 2021.

    She believes the benefits of protecting the Amazon outweigh the benefits of maintaining dependence on oil, particularly considering the cost of regular oil spills and the consequences of worsening the climate crisis.

    “The Amazon is worth more intact than in pieces, as are its people,” she said.

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  • Villavicencio assassination a ‘disturbing moment’ for Ecuador democracy, former running mate says | CNN

    Villavicencio assassination a ‘disturbing moment’ for Ecuador democracy, former running mate says | CNN


    Quito, Ecuador
    CNN
     — 

    The assassination of Ecuadorian presidential candidate Fernando Villavicencio marks a “disturbing moment” for the region and democracy, his successor and former running mate Andrea González Náder has told CNN in an exclusive interview.

    “You never have enough time to process something so shocking and so sobering as the assassination of a presidential candidate (on) such a level of violence and so soon – so close to the presidential elections,” Náder told CNN’s Rafael Romo in an interview in the capital Quito on Saturday.

    “This is a disturbing moment for the whole region and for the world’s democracy,” she said.

    Náder was named as the new presidential candidate for Villavicencio’s Movimiento Construye political party following his death during a campaign rally on Wednesday as violence and crime escalates in the South American country.

    She was seen wearing a bulletproof vest at a candidacy acceptance ceremony in the capital on Friday.

    “Náder was chosen by Fernando Villavicencio and the Movimiento Construye as the designated successor to step in as president in the event of his absence,” the party said in a statement published online on Saturday.

    Villavicencio, 59, an anti-corruption campaigner and lawmaker, was outspoken about violence caused by drug trafficking in Ecuador. His campaign had promised a crackdown on crime and corruption that gripped the country in recent years.

    His killing came 10 days before the first round of the presidential elections, scheduled to take place on August 20.

    His widow Veronica Sarauz expressed disagreement with Náder’s appointment in the wake of her husband’s passing and blamed the state for his murder, demanding answers as to why it happened.

    “The state was in charge of Fernando’s security. The state is directly responsible for the murder of my husband. They did not protect him as they should have protected him,” Sarauz told a news conference on Saturday.

    The 59-year-old was laid to rest in a private ceremony at the Monteolivo cemetery in northern Quito on Friday.

    “The state still has to give many answers about everything that happened. His personal guards did not do their job,” she said.

    Fernando Villavicencio speaks during a campaign rally in Quito.

    Villavicencio’s assassination prompted an outpouring of condemnation from inside Ecuador and around the world.

    The suspected shooter died in police custody following an exchange of fire with security personnel, authorities said.

    Six others – all Colombian nationals – have also been arrested in connection with the killing, believed to be members of organized criminal groups.

    While authorities have not yet announced any confirmed links between gangs to Villavicencio’s assassination, the Ecuadorian Army Command announced the dispatch and deployment of 4,000 personnel – 2,000 military members and 2,000 police officers – to the Zonal 8 Detention Center in Guayas province “to establish control over weapons, ammunition and explosives within the prison.”

    A high profile prisoner José Adolfo Macías Villamar, more popularly known by his alias “Fito” and jailed after being convicted of drug trafficking – is currently incarcerated in the prison, sparking concerns by the authorities.

    Villavicencio – also a former journalist – had said in a televised interview on July 31 that he had been threatened by Macías and warned against continuing with his campaign against gang violence for the leadership.

    Ecuadorian President Guillermo Lasso announced Saturday that Macías “and other dangerous prisoners” would be relocated to the La Roca maximum security prison after drugs, weapons, ammunition and explosives were found.

    Images released by the armed forces on Saturday showed Macías being restrained and searched inside the facility. Macías as well as his gang members have not yet publicly commented on the assassination.

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  • 6 Colombians detained in assassination of presidential candidate in Ecuador, officials say

    6 Colombians detained in assassination of presidential candidate in Ecuador, officials say

    6 Colombians detained in assassination of presidential candidate in Ecuador, officials say – CBS News


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    Officials in Ecuador say six Colombian nationals have been detained after the killing of presidential candidate Fernando Villavicencio, who made a career fighting organized crime and corruption. Lilia Luciano has the story.

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  • Ecuador faces unrest after presidential candidate assassination

    Ecuador faces unrest after presidential candidate assassination

    Ecuador faces unrest after presidential candidate assassination – CBS News


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    Ecuador’s president has declared a state of emergency following the assassination of presidential candidate Fernando Villavicencio, who was killed 10 days before the country’s general election was set to take place. CBS News correspondent Lilia Luciano reports from the capital of Quito.

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  • Assassination of Ecuador presidential candidate Fernando Villavicencio blamed on organized crime

    Assassination of Ecuador presidential candidate Fernando Villavicencio blamed on organized crime

    Quito — A popular Ecuadoran presidential candidate was shot dead while leaving a rally in the nation’s capital on Wednesday, prompting President Guillermo Lasso to declare a state of emergency and blame the assassination on organized crime. Fernando Villavicencio, a 59-year-old anti-corruption crusader who had complained of receiving threats, was murdered as he was leaving a stadium in Quito after holding a campaign rally, officials said. 

    Lasso declared a two-month state of emergency early Thursday following the assassination, but said general elections slated for August 20 would be held as scheduled.

    “Outraged and shocked by the assassination of presidential candidate Fernando Villavicencio,” the president said in a statement on social media, blaming the killing on “organized crime.”

    “For his memory and for his fight, I assure you that this crime will not go unpunished.”

    ECUADOR-ELECTION-CANDIDATE-VILLAVICENCIO
    Ecuadorian presidential candidate Fernando Villavicencio speaks to journalists upon his arrival at the Attorney General’s Office in Quito, August 8, 2023.

    RODRIGO BUENDIA/AFP/Getty


    Villavicencio was the second most popular candidate in the presidential race, according to recent opinion polls.

    “The Armed Forces as of this moment are mobilized throughout the national territory to guarantee the security of citizens, the tranquility of the country and the free and democratic elections of August 20,” Lasso said in a YouTube address.

    The president also declared three days of national mourning “to honor the memory of a patriot, of Fernando Villavicencio Valencia.”

    “This is a political crime that acquires a terrorist character and we do not doubt that this murder is an attempt to sabotage the electoral process,” he added.

    Lasso has said he will not seek re-election.

    Ecuador Presidential Candidate Killed
    A bullet-riddled vehicle is surrounded by police as they guard the hospital where several of the injured were taken after an attack in which presidential candidate Fernando Villavicencio was shot to death in Quito, Ecuador, Aug. 9, 2023.

    Juan Diego Montenegro/AP


    President of the National Electoral Council Diana Atamaint said “the date of the elections scheduled for August 20 remain unalterable.”

    Nine other people were injured in the shooting attack, including a candidate running for the national legislature and two policemen, prosecutors said.

    Villavicencio had been protected by three layers of security, the National Police said Thursday. The innermost ring of guards consisted of five police officers, who were flanked by a support team and two patrol cars. 

    One of the alleged attackers was shot and killed by security personnel following a pursuit, police said. And police detonated an explosive device planted in the area, said chief investigator Alain Luna.

    Three officers who fended off the armed attacker were hit by ammunition, police said. They remain hospitalized in stable condition.

    Police later confirmed they found a pistol-type firearm, ammunition and a grenade explosive at the crime scene. The grenade was neutralized with a controlled detonation. 

    Carlos Figueroa, a friend of Villavicencio’s who was with him at the time of the attack, told local media that the assailants fired around 30 shots.

    “They ambushed him outside” the sports center, Figueroa said. “Some (of those present) even thought they were fireworks.”

    The country’s main newspaper, El Universo, reported that Villavicencio was assassinated “hitman-style and with three shots to the head.”

    Prosecutors later said six other suspects were arrested in raids carried out in southern Quito and in a neighboring town, and that Villavicencio’s body was brought to a police department and would undergo an autopsy.

    Police on Thursday said all six people detained during the raids were foreign nationals linked to organized crime groups. Officers raided several homes and recovered a number of firearms and contraband, including a submachine gun, grenades, motorbikes and a stolen vehicle, police said. 

    In recent years, Ecuador has been hit by a wave of violence linked to drug trafficking which, in the midst of the electoral process, has already led to the death of a mayor and a parliamentary candidate.

    TOPSHOT-ECUADOR-CRIME-VIOLENCE-GANGS-INMATES
    National police officers work at the crime scene of an attack on a patrol car where two policemen were killed in the Maria Piedad neighborhood in Duran, Ecuador, November 1, 2022. 

    GERARDO MENOSCAL/AFP/Getty


    The homicide rate has doubled between 2021 and 2022.

    “Organized crime has gone too far, but the full weight of the law will be applied to them,” Lasso said in his post.

    According to the latest polls, Villavicencio, a former journalist who wrote about corruption and served in parliament, polled at 13% behind lawyer Luisa Gonzalez, who is close to former left-wing president Rafael Correa.

    Gonzalez and other presidential candidates denounced the murder and said they were suspending their campaigns, local media reported.

    “We will never allow such acts to go unpunished. When they touch one, they touch all. When one’s life is at risk, everyone’s life is at risk,” Gonzalez wrote on social media.

    National Court of Justice president Ivan Saquicela called Villavicencio’s murder “very painful for the country.”

    “I am very hurt and very worried about Ecuador,” he said.

    The United States, Spain, Chile and the Organization of American States observer mission have also condemned the crime.

    U.S. Ambassador Mike Fitzpatrick said he was “deeply shocked” by the assassination, and National Security Adviser Jake Sullivan said the U.S. “condemns this brazen act of violence and assault on Ecuador’s democracy.”

    Lasso on Thursday said he’s asked the FBI to assist in the investigation and expects a U.S. delegation to arrive in Ecuador “in the next few hours.”

    “We are horrified by the tragic attack… Violence cannot win. Democracy can,” European Union ambassador to Ecuador Charles-Michel Geurts said in a tweet.

    As a journalist, Villavicencio uncovered a corruption scheme for which former president Correa (2007-2017) was sentenced to eight years in prison.

    Villavicencio later served as president of the legislative oversight commission, where he continued to denounce corruption.

    The politician had complained this month that he and his team were receiving threats allegedly coming from the leader of a criminal gang linked to drug trafficking.

    “Despite the new threats, we will continue fighting for the brave people of our #Ecuador,” he said at the time.

    Atamaint, head of the electoral council, also said that several members of her organization, which is responsible for supervising the ballot, had received death threats.

    President Lasso sent a message to Villavicencio’s family.

    “My solidarity and my condolences with his wife and his daughters,” he said in his post.

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  • Presidential candidate in Ecuador shot and killed at campaign event

    Presidential candidate in Ecuador shot and killed at campaign event

    Ecuadorian presidential candidate Fernando Villavicencio was shot and killed Wednesday by an unidentified gunman while at a political rally in the country’s capital of Quito, President Guillermo Lasso said.

    The killing comes amid a startling wave of violence in the South American nation, with drug trafficking and violent killings on the rise.

    “I assure you that this crime will not go unpunished,” Lasso said in a statement. “Organized crime has gone too far, but they will feel the full weight of the law.”

    Videos on social media appear to show the candidate walking out of the event surrounded by guards. The video then shows Villavicencio entering a white truck followed by gunfire.

    ECUADOR-ELECTION-CANDIDATE-VILLAVICENCIO
    Presidential candidate Fernando Villavicencio speaks to journalists in Quito on August 8 after filing a complaint with the the Attorney General’s Office asking it to investigate former officials linked to the oil sector for corruption. 

    RODRIGO BUENDIA/AFP via Getty Images


    The politician, 59, was the candidate for the Build Ecuador Movement. He was one of eight presidential candidates for the late August election.

    He was one of the most critical voices against corruption, especially during the government of former President Rafael Correa from 2007 to 2017. He filed many judicial complaints against high ranking members of the Correa government.

    Early accounts show that several others were injured in the attack, though authorities did not confirm how many.

    Villavicencio was married and is survived by five children.

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  • Ecuadorean Candidate Villavicencio Killed At Campaign Event

    Ecuadorean Candidate Villavicencio Killed At Campaign Event

    QUITO (Reuters) -A suspect in the killing of Ecuador presidential candidate Fernando Villavicencio has died from injuries sustained during a shootout, the attorney general’s office said on Wednesday on social media platform X, formerly known as Twitter.

    Villavicencio was killed on Wednesday evening during a campaign event in northern Quito, with local media reporting the former lawmaker had been shot.

    “A suspect, who was injured during the shootout with security personnel, was apprehended and moved, badly injured, to the (attorney general’s) unit in Quito. An ambulance from the fire department confirmed his death, the police are proceeding with collection of the cadaver,” the attorney general’s office said.

    Villavicencio’s party Movimiento Construye said on X that armed men attacked its Quito offices.

    Ecuador’s police and Interior Ministry did not respond to repeated requests for comment about the details of the killing.

    “For his memory and his fight, I assure you that this crime will not remain unpunished,” President Guillermo Lasso said on X. “Organized crime have gone very far, but all the weight of the law will fall on them.”

    Lasso said he would host top security officials at an urgent meeting.

    Videos on social media purportedly from the campaign event showed people taking cover and screaming as gunfire sounded.

    WARNING: Video contains graphic violence

    According to opinion polls, Villavicencio’s support was at 7.5%, ranking him fifth out of eight presidential candidates for the August 20 vote.

    Lasso’s government has blamed rising violence on the streets and in prisons on criminal infighting to control trafficking routes used by Mexican cartels, the Albanian mafia and others to move drugs.

    Security concerns, along with employment and migration, are major voter concerns in the presidential contest.

    Villavicencio, from the Andean province of Chimborazo, was a former union member at state oil company Petroecuador and later a journalist who denounced alleged millions in oil contract losses.

    He had on Tuesday made a report to the attorney general’s office about an oil business, but no further details of his report were made public.

    Villavicencio was an outspoken critic of former President Rafael Correa and was sentenced to 18 months in prison for defamation over statements made against the former president.

    He fled to Indigenous territory within Ecuador and later was given asylum in Peru.

    As a legislator, Villavicencio was criticized by opposition politicians for obstructing an impeachment process this year against Lasso, which lead the latter to call the early elections.

    Villavicencio had pledged to combat corruption and reduce tax evasion.

    Other candidates in the race reacted with horror to the killing.

    “This makes us all mourn, my solidarity to all his family and the people who follow his ideals. This vile act will not go unpunished!,” presidential candidate Luisa Gonzalez, who is running for Correa’s party, said in a post on platform X.

    Indigenous candidate Yaku Perez said he had decided to suspend his presidential campaign and demanded the violence stop, in a video posted after the incident.

    “To the government; we don’t want words… Act. We are dying,” candidate Otto Sonnenholzner told a press conference.

    “Today more than ever, the need to act with a strong hand against crime is reiterated. May God have him in his glory,” presidential hopeful Jan Topic said in his own post on X, before also suspending his campaign.

    (Reporting by Alexandra Valencia in Quito, additional reporting by Valentine Hilaire, Isabel Woodford and Carolina PuliceWriting by Julia Symmes CobbEditing by Lincoln Feast)

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  • Amazon nations launch alliance to protect rainforest at key summit

    Amazon nations launch alliance to protect rainforest at key summit

    Bolivia, Brazil, Colombia, Ecuador, Guyana, Peru, Suriname and Venezuela sign declaration to safeguard the Amazon.

    Eight South American countries have agreed to launch an alliance to protect the Amazon, pledging at a summit in Brazil to stop the world’s biggest rainforest from reaching “a point of no return”.

    Leaders from South American nations also challenged developed countries to do more to stop the enormous destruction of the world’s largest rainforest, a task they said cannot fall to just a few countries when the crisis has been caused by so many.

    The closely-watched summit of the Amazon Cooperation Treaty Organization (ACTO) adopted on Tuesday what host country Brazil called a “new and ambitious shared agenda” to save the rainforest, a crucial buffer against climate change that experts warn is being pushed to the brink of collapse.

    The group’s members – Bolivia, Brazil, Colombia, Ecuador, Guyana, Peru, Suriname and Venezuela – signed a joint declaration in Belem, at the mouth of the Amazon River, laying out a nearly 10,000-word roadmap to promote sustainable development, end deforestation and fight the organised crime that fuels it.

    But the summit attendees stopped short of agreeing to the key demands of environmentalists and Indigenous groups, including for all member countries to adopt Brazil’s pledge to end illegal deforestation by 2030 and Colombia’s pledge to halt new oil exploration. Instead, countries will be left to pursue their individual deforestation goals.

    Brazilian President Luiz Inacio Lula da Silva, who has staked his international reputation on improving Brazil’s environmental standing, had been pushing for the region to unite behind a common policy of ending deforestation by 2030.

    The two-day summit opened on the same day the European Union’s climate observatory confirmed that July was the hottest month ever recorded on Earth. Lula emphasised the “severe worsening of the climate crisis” in his opening speech.

    “The challenges of our era and the opportunities arising from them demand we act in unison,” he said.

    “It has never been so urgent,” he added.

    Colombian President Gustavo Petro urged a radical rethink of the global economy, calling for a “Marshall Plan”-style strategy in which developing countries’ debt is cancelled in exchange for action to protect the climate.

    “If we’re on the verge of extinction and this is the decade when the big decisions have to be made… then what are we doing, besides giving speeches?” he said.

    The failure of the eight Amazon countries to agree on a binding pact to protect their forests was greeted with disappointment by some.

    “The planet is melting, we are breaking temperature records every day. It is not possible that, in a scenario like this, eight Amazonian countries are unable to put in a statement – in large letters – that deforestation needs to be zero,” said Marcio Astrini of the environmental lobby group Climate Observatory.

    Beyond deforestation, the “Belem Declaration”, the gathering’s official proclamation issued on Tuesday, also did not fix a deadline on ending illegal gold mining, although leaders agreed to cooperate on the issue and better combat cross-border environmental crime.

    Al Jazeera’s Latin America editor Lucia Newman, reporting from the summit in Belem, said Lula da Silva had hoped for a strong commitment from peers at the summit to end deforestation in the Amazon.

    “Critics say the final document was full of good intentions but short on deadlines,” Newman said.

    “Nevertheless, there did seem to be a greater sense of urgency among the eight Amazonian nation leaders. Deforestation of the world’s largest rainforest has already reached 17 percent and, according to scientists, the tipping point is almost here,” Newman said.

    Home to an estimated 10 percent of Earth’s biodiversity, 50 million people and hundreds of billions of trees, the vast Amazon is a vital carbon sink, reducing global warming.

    Scientists warn the destruction of the rainforest is pushing it dangerously close to a “tipping point” beyond which trees would die off and release carbon rather than absorb it, with catastrophic consequences for the climate.

    Seeking to pressure the gathered heads of state, hundreds of environmentalists, activists and Indigenous demonstrators marched to the conference venue, urging bold action.

    This is the first summit in 14 years for the eight-nation group, set up in 1995 by the South American countries that share the Amazon basin. The summit is also being seen as a dress rehearsal for the 2025 United Nations climate talks, which Belem will host.

     

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  • Ecuador confirms oil spill of 1,200 barrels on northwest coast

    Ecuador confirms oil spill of 1,200 barrels on northwest coast

    State-owned firm Petroecuador says it is investigating cause of spill that contaminated about 4km (2.5 miles) of beach.

    Authorities in the South American nation of Ecuador have confirmed that an oil spill released about 1,200 barrels into the Pacific, contaminating kilometres of oceanfront.

    Rafael Armendariz, transportation manager for the state-owned oil firm Petroecuador, confirmed on Thursday that the incident took place a day earlier when a tank in the marine terminal in the port of Esmeraldas surpassed its capacity.

    “It is estimated that around 1,200 barrels were spilled,” Armendariz said at a press conference. “Not all of them fell onto the beach. A part was contained by the pool inside of Petroecuador’s facilities.”

    The spill occurred at state-run Petroecuador’s refinery in Esmeraldas, affecting nearby beaches [File: Daniel Tapia/Reuters]

    About half of the crude spilled out of Petroecuador’s facilities, spreading across about 4km (2.5 miles) of Las Palmas Beach, a popular destination for recreation and tourists.

    An investigation into the cause of the spill is taking place. General Manager Ramon Correa said problems like negligence, mechanical damage or sabotage could not yet be ruled out.

    Esmeraldas is about 150km (93 miles) south of Ecuador’s northern border with Colombia. The company says it has controlled 90 percent of the spill’s impact on land and 60 percent at sea through initial cleanup efforts.

    Environmental Minister Jose Davalos told the TV station Ecuavisa the spill could affect wildlife such as birds and crustaceans. He expected the cleanup to take about a week.

    Davalos noted that he is awaiting an assessment from Petroecuador before deciding on appropriate penalties.

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  • Ecuadoran woman who knocked on coffin during her own wake has died

    Ecuadoran woman who knocked on coffin during her own wake has died

    A 76-year-old woman who had been declared dead, and surprised her relatives by knocking on her coffin during her wake earlier this month, has died after seven days in intensive care, her family said Saturday.

    Gilberto Barbera Montoya, the woman’s son, told The Associated Press that doctors at the state hospital where she was rushed after the initial incident said that she died on Friday evening.

    Bella Montoya initially had been admitted with a possible stroke and cardiopulmonary arrest, and when she did not respond to resuscitation a doctor on duty declared her dead, the ministry said.

    On June 9, Montoya reportedly woke up and started knocking after spending five hours inside her coffin at a funeral home in Babahoyo, southwest of Quito.

    Similar events have happened in the United States recently. In December an Iowa care facility mistakenly pronounced a 66-year-old resident dead and had her transported to a funeral home, where she woke up “gasping for air.”  In 2020, a young woman who was declared dead opened her eyes as she was about to be embalmed.

    Ecuador’s health ministry confirmed in a statement Saturday that Montoya died from an ischemic stroke after spending a week in intensive care. It added that Montoya had remained under “permanent surveillance,” but didn’t provide further information on the medical investigation surrounding the case.

    Barbera Montoya said that he hadn’t yet received any report from the authorities on the medical explanation of what happened, and warned that things “are not going to stay like this.” He added that a sister of the deceased woman had formally complained about the incident, seeking to identify the doctor who declared her dead to begin with.

    The remains of Montoya, who was a retired nurse, are back at the same funeral home where she woke up. Her son told the AP that she will be buried at a public cemetery.

    A technical committee has been formed to review how the hospital issues death certificates, the country’s ministry of health said last week.

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