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    Avalon Member Ravenlocke's Avatar
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    Default Re: Turmoil in Ecuador

    January 9,

    https://x.com/KawsachunNews/status/1744975049776333163

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    Default Re: Turmoil in Ecuador

    https://x.com/KawsachunNews/status/1744931045902860324



    https://x.com/KawsachunNews/status/1744932075205992828



    https://x.com/KawsachunNews/status/1744933495858696435

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  5. Link to Post #143
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    Default Re: Turmoil in Ecuador

    Google Translation Text:
    Leonidas Iza, president of Conaie, has called on social organizations to "strengthen the levels of social organization" to "defend life" and confront "crime and excessive violence."

    https://x.com/ActualidadRT/status/1744901877370913273



    https://esrt.site/actualidad/495130-...ecuador-minuto

    Armed violence in Ecuador, MINUTE BY MINUTE

    Since Monday, after issuing the decree of a state of emergency, violence was unleashed in Ecuador. The kidnapping of three police officers has been recorded, in addition to an attack in Tenguel (Guayas) and vehicle fires in several provinces. The most recent fact is the taking of a television channel in Guayaquil by hooded and armed people. In parallel, President Daniel Noboa signed a decree in which he recognizes the existence of an "internal armed conflict."



    After the escape last Sunday from the regional prison of Guayaquil of José Adolfo Macías Villamar, alias 'Fito', leader of the criminal gang 'Los Choneros', mutinies were unleashed in different prisons in the country and videos circulated on social networks in which hooded and armed criminals asked President Daniel Noboa to refrain from sending troops to prisons.
    In the midst of this situation, Noboa announced on January 8 a state of emergency so that the Armed Forces could intervene in prisons and the so-called 'Fenix Plan was deployed, which included the implementation of controls by the Armed Forces and the National Police.
    The crusade against insecurity launched by the Government was responded to with brutal violence by criminal organizations. In the last two days, there have been several episodes of attacks against the Police and the Army, and criminal acts, such as burning of vehicles and damage to public spaces and goods in different provinces.
    This Tuesday, hooded and armed people took over the facilities of the TC Television channel in Guayaquil. Subsequently, the authorities reported the capture of those responsible. Likewise, and in response to the situation in Ecuador, Noboa issued a decree in which he recognizes the existence of an "internal armed conflict."

    The rest of the minute by minute here,

    https://esrt.site/actualidad/495130-...ecuador-minuto

    ¤=[Post Update]=¤

    Text:
    🇪🇨 Ecuador enfrenta su cuarta jornada tras decretarse el conflicto armado interno
    Son varias cárceles donde se mantienen los criminales amotinados y son 158 agentes penitenciarios y 20 funcionarios administrativos los secuestrados.

    @luigifsoto
    comenta los detalles.
    Translated from Spanish by
    🇪🇨 Ecuador faces its fourth day after declaring the internal armed conflict
    There are several prisons where mutinous criminals are kept and 158 prison officers and 20 administrative officials are kidnapped.

    @luigifsoto
    comments on the details.

    https://x.com/ActualidadRT/status/1745893407820796375

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  7. Link to Post #144
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    Default Re: Turmoil in Ecuador

    Text:
    Altos cargos de EE.UU. viajarán a Ecuador para combatir narcotráfico

    La jefa del Comando Sur de EE.UU., Laura Richardson, y otros altos cargos del país norteamericano viajarán a Ecuador para combatir el narcotráfico.
    Translated from Spanish by
    🇪🇨 Senior US officials will travel to Ecuador to combat drug trafficking

    The head of the US Southern Command, Laura Richardson, and other senior officials of the North American country will travel to Ecuador to combat drug trafficking.

    https://x.com/ActualidadRT/status/1745909765757415802




    Note this X comment in regards to the above news,

    Mucha vuelta para terminar en lo que se quería, entregar el territorio ecuatoriano a los gringos, bajo la observancia y el pretexto de la lucha contra el narcotráfico o terrorismo ya que Noboa los cataloga así, se cometerá persecución política, que nadie tenga duda que pasará.
    Translated from Spanish by
    A lot of backtracking to end up with what was wanted, handing over Ecuadorian territory to the gringos, under the observance and pretext of the fight against drug trafficking or terrorism since Noboa classifies them that way, political persecution will be committed, let no one have any doubt what will happen. .

    https://x.com/HumbertoSurezG3/status...16899131527569

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  9. Link to Post #145
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    Default Re: Turmoil in Ecuador

    Text:
    🇪🇨🇺🇸 | La jefa del Comando Sur de los Estados Unidos, Laura Richardson, visitará Ecuador, en las próximas semanas, para profundizar la cooperación en el combate al crimen organizado e incrementar el intercambio de inteligencia.
    Translated from Spanish by
    🇪🇨🇺🇸 | The head of the United States Southern Command, Laura Richardson, will visit Ecuador in the coming weeks to deepen cooperation in the fight against organized crime and increase intelligence sharing.

    https://x.com/MundoEConflicto/status...95957638639705

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  11. Link to Post #146
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    Arrow Re: Turmoil in Ecuador



    Quote Posted by Ewan (here)
    I understand you use a translator, but Bill actually highlighted in red comments from local business people that literally said what they heard was simply not true!

    With that info, I'd be more inclined to trust a local, regardless of their elevation, to be more accurate than an international news report.
    What we need to know is how far away these local inhabitants are from the towns where these conflicts are provoked. Between living in the countryside far from the big cities, there is often a difference in the way information is disseminated.
    Ecuador 🇪🇨 is not far from Colombia 🇨🇴 and Peru 🇵🇪, countries where drug corruption is rife in South America.
    Living in the countryside is not the same as living in a big city. Between temptations and deprivations, behavior changes...



    Quote Posted by Lunesoleil (here)
    My participation after the media spread the news in France
    https://lunesoleil23-wordpress-com.t...en&_x_tr_hl=fr
    Last edited by Lunesoleil; 13th January 2024 at 12:14. Reason: Alternative media videos

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  13. Link to Post #147
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    Default Re: Turmoil in Ecuador

    I saw similar situation before when living in Brazil, they blame drug traffickers, gangs, etc.. but the real story was something else (front crises), perhaps they got some rare minerals and they want to sell part of the country (see current situation of the Amazon with the fake NGOs) or maybe is something else, but it is NEVER what they are reporting in the fake mainstream news.

    Trust your local resources is a way more accurate than trust international outlets. What these fancy people with fancy big words knows? they don't even speak the local dialect and want sell the big picture of it. Just ask a person in the affected area is all it takes, one will be surprised to hear what they have to say.

    For local news stick with the locals, is your best bet.
    --
    A chaos to the sense, a Kosmos to the reason.

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  15. Link to Post #148
    UK Avalon Founder Bill Ryan's Avatar
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    Default Re: Turmoil in Ecuador

    Today's update. It contains a lot more mundane news, and I'll highlight the parts that may be relevant or [mildly!] interesting. It's slightly edited for easier reading, and some local items have been skipped.

    Regarding the posts above reported elsewhere in the world, much of the news was (a) exaggerated and (b) several days out of date. There were several prison breaks earlier in the week, but since then there have been many re-arrests.

    One prison (Turi) still has a hostage situation which hasn't been resolved yet. The military may storm the prison to end the stand-off, but if so it may be very bloody. I believe that's the one remaining unhandled issue in the country.

    I drove through Cuenca yesterday, and I can confirm that everything was exceptionally normal. (If 'exceptionally normal' means anything in English! )
    Neighbors pitch in to support the military; City buys motorcycles, cars for the police; Bomb scare turns out to be fireworks; Officials warn of spreading rumors

    Members of the Duran family in the Zhin Zhin barrio of Baños asked themselves how they could collaborate with police and military who were responding to the violence in Ecuador. One idea was to cook and deliver food. So on the morning of the 10th, they polled their neighbors to see if they would be interested in helping with buying ingredients and helping to cook. The tiendas and neighbors responded with chicken, rice, oil and spices and enough volunteers to prepare 225 containers of food and beverages.


    Neighbors in the in the Zhin Zhin barrio of Baños prepare meals for the troops and police stationed at the Turi prison.

    [... snipped...]

    Alert for detonation of explosive device in avenue ruled out

    Police responded to alerts about an explosion on Huayna Cápac y González Suárez and verified it was fireworks and not a bombing.

    [... snipped...]

    911 reported no increase in emergencies in the country

    Bolívar Tello, director of ECU 911 reported that an analysis of the number of emergencies reported between 9/1 at 6:00 to 10/1 at 6:00 was 8,748 which is similar to the number of alerts in a normal day.

    The 7,178 video surveillance cameras showed normal circulation of people and cars. There were fewer cars in different areas of the country due to suspension of in-person classes in schools and telecommuting by some businesses. In other areas there was traffic congestion. ECU 911 called for people to stay calm, get your information from official sources only, and not send out rumors and false news.
    <I know none of you would ever think of receiving dubious news from even more unreliable sources and immediately sending it out to your 5,000 best friends on several platforms as God’s truth.> [From Bill: this was the journalist's added comment ]

    National: Mega-prison designs ready

    Pres. Noboa presented the designs for the 2 mega-prisons to be built in Santa Elena and Pastaza provinces. Each prison will have the capacity to house 736 prisoners and have super-maximum, maximum and high security modules; cell and satellite blocking; electronic systems with state-of-the-art technology; digital and analog access control; triple perimeter security; self-generation of electricity; water treatment and armored construction and faceless guards.

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  17. Link to Post #149
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    Default Re: Turmoil in Ecuador

    Today's update:
    (extracted, only showing relevant items here)
    1,327 arrested in anti-terrorist operations

    The Armed Forces and National Police Joint Command reported Sunday it has made 1,327 arrests of suspected gang members, 143 of them with “confirmed links to terrorist gangs” during Plan Fénix. The Command said a total of 12,974 operations have been conducted in 18 of the country’s 24 provinces.

    According to an official statement, the Command said it conducted 32 raids aimed at dismantling criminal cells associated with 22 gangs designated as “terrorist organizations.” It reported that 491 firearms, 268 knives, 10,241 rounds of ammunition, 462 explosives, 343 vehicles, 14 boats, as well as large quantities of drugs and cash have been seized in the past five days.

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    Default Re: Turmoil in Ecuador

    https://x.com/SputnikInt/status/1746836354804199651

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    Default Re: Turmoil in Ecuador

    https://x.com/mazzenilsson/status/1748468242484535402

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    Default Re: Turmoil in Ecuador

    Quote Posted by Ravenlocke (here)
    https://x.com/mazzenilsson/status/1748468242484535402

    An update on this already. (Suatez was killed two days ago, on Wednesday.)
    (extracted)

    Arrests made in Guayaquil prosecutor murder

    Two men have been arrested for the murder of Guayaquil prosecutor Cesar Suarez, and Police Commander Cesar Zapata says both are linked to the Los Chonekillers criminal gang. Suarez was shot multiple times in his car on Wednesday as he drove to a court hearing for the suspects in the invasion of the TC Television studios last week.

    During the arrests, police recovered firearms they say were used in the murder, including several handguns and multiple rounds of ammunition. Zapata said that two more suspects have been identified in the crime and remain at large.

    Suarez was conducting a number of investigations of criminal gangs and had interviewed most of those arrested in the TC Television studio attack, January 9. According to Zapata, several of Suarez’s cases involved Chonekillers attacks on police in the Duran-Guayaquil area. He added that there is also a connection between drug trafficker Leandro Norero, the center of Operation Metastasis arrests, and the Chonekillers.

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    Default Re: Turmoil in Ecuador

    Two suspects arrested, two are on the run.

    https://x.com/telesurenglish/status/1748409990266638797

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    Default Re: Turmoil in Ecuador

    Some more news on the US “security assistance” to Ecuador,


    https://x.com/KawsachunNews/status/1746552562650698016

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    Default Re: Turmoil in Ecuador

    https://x.com/SDonziger/status/1758974642465730783



    https://amazonwatch.org/news/2024/01...-again-at-risk

    Despite Victory in a Historic Referendum, Yasuní National Park Is Again at Risk
    Ecuador's president announces plans to ignore the popular vote and continue drilling for oil in one of the most biodiverse places on the planet, home to Indigenous peoples living in voluntary isolation

    Despite Victory in a Historic Referendum, Yasuní National Park Is Again at Risk
    Ecuador's president announces plans to ignore the popular vote and continue drilling for oil in one of the most biodiverse places on the planet, home to Indigenous peoples living in voluntary isolation


    January 30, 2024 | Kevin Koenig | Eye on the Amazon

    In August 2023, millions of Ecuadorians made history. The country became the first to keep fossil fuels in the ground by popular vote, with an overwhelming 60% choosing to keep over 700 million barrels of crude permanently in the ground underneath Yasuní National Park. It was a major victory for Indigenous peoples, biodiversity, and the climate in a country that is the largest producer of Amazon crude and which has seen decades of contamination and rights abuses at the hands of the oil industry.

    But now, the government seeks to upend the will of voters and continue drilling in Yasuní under the pretense of funding the country’s escalating conflict with organized crime.

    President Daniel Noboa announced his support this week for a “moratorium” on implementing the referendum results for “at least a year,” backing away from a campaign promise and declarations he made after taking office in October that the referendum results would be respected and implemented. At the time, he expressed intent to move Ecuador away from commodities and that the country didn’t have to keep drilling like “back in the stone age.” He also questioned the economic logic of continuing to drill in Yasuní. Ecuador crude sells for $8 less than the WTI benchmark, which is projected to be not greater than $70 for the next five years. Crude from Yasuní is even more deeply discounted, and sells for $58. But it costs an estimated $59 per barrel to extract. “If I were to make any money, it would be very little,” said Noboa at the time.

    The country’s Constitutional Court, which green-lighted the referendum, gave state-run oil company Petroecuador one year from the vote to end drilling of the Ishpingo, Tambococha, Tiputini (ITT) oil fields inside Block 43 in the country’s remote rainforest region along the Peruvian border. Additionally, it ordered that all infrastructure must be dismantled and removed, and the area remediated and restored, within that one-year timeframe. Yasuní is a UNESCO biosphere reserve widely considered one of the most biodiverse places on the planet, and it is home to Indigenous peoples, including the Tagaeri, Taromenane, and Dugakaeri who are living in voluntary isolation from the outside world.

    Noboa claims his about-face is needed to help finance the country’s efforts to stop a surge in violence from drug cartels that is terrorizing the nation and restore order and security. Once relatively tranquil, Ecuador has very recently become one of Latin America’s most dangerous places, with the highest homicide rate in the region. A state of emergency was declared on January 8, followed by a declaration of “internal armed conflict” the day after.

    But Ecuador’s Indigenous movement and the Yasunidos collective who spearheaded the original campaign to gather signatures to qualify the question of leaving the ITT reserves in the ground to voters challenge Noboa’s pretext for delay.

    “Noboa and oil interests are taking advantage of the crisis,” said Pedro Bermeo from Yasunidos. “Instead of considering other options – like ending tax breaks and subsidies for big corporations – they are trafficking in fear to undermine the will of voters and upend democracy. This is not Daniel Noboa’s decision. The people have voted, and our votes must be respected.”

    Indeed, the current crisis is providing an opportunity for the government to push through a long wish list of Shock Doctrine style regressive neoliberal reforms, like raising the value-added tax and ending fuel subsidies that previous administrations were unable to do, taking advantage of daily curfews and the fact that many civil liberties, like the right to assemble, are suspended. Noboa is also moving to expand powers and grant broad immunity to the military and police, raising major concerns from rights advocates and environmental defenders. “Democracy can’t become the new victim of organized crime,” stated Vivian Idrovo, coordinator of the Alliance of Organizations for Human Rights in Ecuador.

    Of additional concern is the fact that Noboa has expressed his desire to use funds from drilling in Yasuní to support further military action, while also asking the U.S. government for increased security aid. In fact, the Biden administration should make it crystal clear that Ecuador should not sacrifice human rights, the environment, or the democratic process to protect Yasuní for the sake of security. A condition for U.S. aid is respect for human rights, and Noboa’s plans to undermine or delay implementation of the decision of the Inter-American Court with respect to Yasuní should be of extreme concern to U.S. officials.

    Undermining democracy

    The strength of keeping ITT oil in the ground via referendum vote was that it could not be easily undone. It was not a presidential decree or a policy that could be reversed by a new government, industry pressure, or shifting political winds. However, Noboa and a group of legislators are exploring ways to circumvent the clear decision of Ecuadorians at the polls.

    Noboa may try to petition the Constitutional Court for more time to implement the decision – something Petroecuador has been arguing in hopes of prolonging well closure as long as possible. But the Yasuní referendum question was placed on the ballot as remedy for a court case brought by Yasunidos, who, according to the Constitutional Court, had their right to participatory democracy violated when the 750,000 signatures they collected to qualify for a referendum were wrongly deemed invalid.

    As Amazon Watch legal advisor Nathaly Yepez explains, “Even in a scenario in which the Court determines that the request to extend the deadline somehow complies with the results of the Yasuní referendum, it still could not render it meaningless and nullify what was decided at the polls. The referendum imposes immediate obligations that the government already must comply with, such as not entering into new contracts that continue oil exploitation in Block 43 in Yasuní.”

    Another extreme idea being explored by several members of congress is to simply repeat the referendum, a blatant attack on democracy given it was less than six months ago that the vast majority of voters approved keeping oil in the ground, and no progress has been made to implement the results of the first referendum.

    Even without any new pretext, Petrocuador has been dragging its feet on implementing the vote within the one-year timeframe established by the court, citing costs and technical challenges to closing the 225 wells that produce an estimated 58,000 bpd. The company has conveniently interpreted the one-year deadline to mean it has until August 2024 to stop production, as opposed to completing the removal of all equipment and remediation and clean-up of the damage that its activities have already caused. Yasunidos recently filed a complaint with the court over Petroecuador’s failure to begin implementing any of the court ordered measures.

    Increased threat for isolated peoples

    Not only does delay in implementing the referendum vote undermine democracy, it is an existential threat for the nomadic Tagaeri, Taromenane, and Dugakaeri, Ecuador’s last known Indigenous peoples living in isolation. Much of their traditional territory includes the boundaries of Yasuní National Park. But eight oil concessions overlap the park, and a controversial new road to connect wells of the ITT fields is less than a quarter of a mile from a designated no-go zone established in 1999 to protect them.

    The Tagaeri, Taromenane, and Dugakaeri are under pressure from all sides – hemmed in by oil wells, pipelines, and roads – while illegal loggers and poachers further encroach into forest area they traditionally use, interrupting their seasonal hunting, fishing, and food collection patterns. Contamination from frequent oil spills along with gas flaring also pose significant health risks, and continued drilling increases the likelihood of forced contact, violent conflict, exposure to disease, and continued erosion of their food sovereignty and autonomy.

    Many of these rights violations are part of a groundbreaking case on the rights of isolated Indigenous peoples now pending before the Inter-American Court of Human Rights. The Tagaeri and Taromenane Indigenous people vs. the Ecuadorian state was brought on behalf of the three Indigenous peoples against the Ecuadorian government for failing to protect them and putting them at risk from oil extraction. A decision is expected this year.

    According to Leonidas Iza, president of CONAIE (the Confederation of Indigenous Nationalities of Ecuador), the current crisis is being used as a pretense to implement regressive measures that particularly affect Indigenous peoples. “Under the pretext of the current crisis, the government wants to implement its neoliberal economic model, exonerating taxes for big companies while raising them on everyone else. In the Amazon, oil drilling is also death and destruction. For 50 years we’ve been told that oil extraction will bring development and reduce poverty. But the opposite is true. We know firsthand that more oil will not solve the security or financial crisis we are suffering through together as a country. The mafias of the extractive industry are part of the problem. Our Indigenous brothers living in isolation, Yasuní, and our democracy must not be sacrificed for a crisis that can be solved a different way.”

    In the midst of rising violence last August, an overwhelming majority of Ecuadorians voted for hope. They voted to protect nature and Indigenous rights. They voted for future generations. They voted for life. We stand in solidarity with Ecuador in the face of this crisis and all those that face violence. And the eyes of the world are on President Noboa and his administration to respect the will of its voters and to keep the oil in the ground.
    "Hope is the thing with feathers that perches in the soul and sings the tune without the words and never stops at all."
    - - - - Emily Elizabeth Dickinson. 🪶💜

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  31. Link to Post #156
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    Default Re: Turmoil in Ecuador

    The military in Ecuador raided the Mexican embassy and arrested former VP Jorge Glas.

    halturnerradioshow.com
    Quote Armed Soldiers of the Ecuadorian Army RAIDED the Mexican Embassy in Quito to arrest the former vice president of Ecuador Jorge Glas

    According to Article 22 of the Vienna Convention, diplomatic premises cannot be violated.

    Today, the Ecuadorian state forcibly entered the Mexican embassy in Ecuador and removed Jorge Glas.

    The Mexican president has quickly moved to break off diplomatic ties with Ecuador after police broke into the Mexican Embassy to arrest a former Ecuadorian vice president who had sought political asylum there after being indicted on corruption charges.
    04/06/24 (2:16)

    Quote Mexico has cut diplomatic ties with Ecuador.
    That's after police raided the Mexican embassy in Quito.
    They arrested Ecuador's former Vice President Jorge Glas, who had been evading detention in the Mexican embassy since December.

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  33. Link to Post #157
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    Default Re: Turmoil in Ecuador

    Text:
    🇪🇨🇲🇽 🔴‼️ BREAKING: ECUADOR'S POLICE STORMS MEXICAN EMBASSY TO ARREST EX VICE-PRESIDENT

    Mexico has suspended diplomatic ties with Ecuador after its embassy was stormed in Quito on Friday. The Ecuadorian Police arrested their own former VP Jorge Glas, who was seeking asylum in the Mexican embassy, citing persecution by the attorney general's office on corruption charges


    https://x.com/svsnewsagency/status/1776517505546424796

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  35. Link to Post #158
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    Default Re: Turmoil in Ecuador

    https://x.com/KawsachunNews/status/1776541325300543606



    ¤=[Post Update]=¤

    Text:
    🇪🇨🇲🇽With Israel bombing embassies we get some unprecedented violations once again. Mexico’s foreign ministry gave political asylum to former Ecuadorian vice president Jorge Glas. He had been staying in Mexico’s embassy in Quito since late last year after Ecuador charged him with corruption.

    Ecuador sent in a special forces team to break into Mexico's embassy and has arrested Jorge Glas. Mexico has now broken off diplomatic relations with Ecuador.

    ❗️Asbery's Opinion: Ecuador leader is a wealthy heir, born and educated in the US. He is pro-US/Ukraine so the West will ignore his violation of the "rules based order" most likely. I think as a new order arises and the old order resists that we should expect international laws and norms to be disregarded. Potentially it could be a bumpy next decade or two.

    https://dw.com/en/mexico-cuts-ties-w...aid/a-68755686

    Slavyangrad

    https://x.com/dana916/status/1776660187354374483

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    Default Re: Turmoil in Ecuador

    https://x.com/telesurenglish/status/1776490459944169732



    https://x.com/telesurenglish/status/1776503157364793837



    https://x.com/telesurenglish/status/1776596315943657957



    https://x.com/telesurenglish/status/1776683878553395241



    https://www.telesurenglish.net/news/...0406-0003.html


    Latin American Countries Condemn Mexican Embassy Assault


    The condemnation by Latin American countries of the violent invasion of the Mexican embassy in the Ecuadorian capital, Quito, has not been delayed.

    The Brazilian government condemned, "in the strongest terms", the "repudiable" police intrusion in the diplomatic headquarters. The measure of the "Ecuadorian Government constitutes a serious precedent, which must be strongly repudiated, whatever the justification for its implementation," said the Ministry of Foreign Affairs of Brazil.

    Miguel Díaz-Canel, the Cuban President expressed solidarity with the Government of Mexico. "All our solidarity with Mexico, in the face of the unacceptable violation of its Embassy in Quito," Díaz-Canel wrote on X. He stated that "the Vienna Convention on Diplomatic Relations, which is an essential component of international law, must be respected by all".

    For his part, the Bolivian president Luis Arce condemned and described the action as "unacceptable". In a message on his social networks, Arce said that Bolivia, respectful "of the rules governing diplomatic relations, strongly condemns the intrusion of the Ecuadorian police" in the Mexican embassy in Quito, an event "unprecedented in the history of international law".

    The Chilean government also expressed "its strongest condemnation" on Saturday and expressed "its deep concern about the violation of the right to asylum". The Chilean Ministry of Foreign Affairs conveyed its solidarity "to all the diplomatic staff of the Embassy of Mexico in Ecuador" and asked that "this incident between sister nations, with which Chile maintains close relations and of historical friendship, is soon overcome".

    On the other hand, the Venezuelan President Nicolás Maduro, described this Saturday as a "fascist act" the police intrusion in the Embassy of Mexico in Quito. "All this constitutes an action that not even in the most atrocious dictatorships in the region had been recorded (...), creating a worrying precedent for Ecuador and the world," said the Bolivarian government in X.

    Xiomara Castro, the Honduran president, described the police intrusion into the embassy as "intolerable". Castro indicated in X that the aggression constitutes an intolerable act for the international community, since it ignores the historic and fundamental right to asylum.
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    Default Re: Turmoil in Ecuador

    Here is another story explanation.

    “ On Friday, Ecuador's government declared Mexican Ambassador Raquel Serur Smeke a “persona non grata” and ordered her to leave on Thursday.

    The move came after recent statements by Mexican President Andres Manuel Lopez Obrador, who suggested Daniel Noboa won the Ecuadorian presidential election because of the murder of candidate Fernando Villavicencio.

    Responding to the move, the Mexican Foreign Ministry lamented the declaration of persona non grata to Ambassador Smeke and denounced acts of "clear harassment" to the Mexican Embassy.”


    https://x.com/anadoluagency/status/1776539090114211970



    https://www.aa.com.tr/en/americas/ec...sident/3185094

    Ecuadorian police raid Mexican Embassy to arrest former vice president
    Mexico suspending diplomatic relations with Ecuador, says Mexican president

    BOGOTA, Colombia

    Police in Ecuador raided the Mexican Embassy in Quito to arrest former Vice President Jorge Glas, who had been granted political asylum by Mexico.

    Police entered the Mexican Embassy in Quito and detained Glas despite Mexico's announcement of granting him political asylum, according to local media. 


    Speaking to the reporters, Roberto Canseco, the head of political affairs at the Mexican Embassy, denounced the raid, stating that Ecuadorian police entered the embassy by force and assaulted the staff.

    "This is absolutely unacceptable, it cannot be, and this is literally barbaric. We are concerned for Glas' safety," Canseco said.

    In response to the incident, Mexico has suspended diplomatic relations with Ecuador, citing the violation of national sovereignty.

    Mexican President Andres Manuel Lopez Obrador characterized Ecuadorian police's intrusion into the embassy as a breach of Mexico’s sovereignty.

    "This is a flagrant violation of international law and Mexico's sovereignty, which is why I have instructed our foreign minister to issue a statement regarding this authoritarian act, proceed legally, and immediately declare the suspension of diplomatic relations with the government of Ecuador," Obrador wrote on X.


    As of Dec. 17, 2023, Blas sought refuge in Mexico's Embassy to avoid a prison term on two counts of corruption. Friction between the two countries has escalated following the Mexican government's refusal to allow Ecuadorian authorities to enter the country to arrest Blas.

    On Friday, Ecuador's government declared Mexican Ambassador Raquel Serur Smeke a “persona non grata” and ordered her to leave on Thursday.

    The move came after recent statements by Mexican President Andres Manuel Lopez Obrador, who suggested Daniel Noboa won the Ecuadorian presidential election because of the murder of candidate Fernando Villavicencio.

    Responding to the move, the Mexican Foreign Ministry lamented the declaration of persona non grata to Ambassador Smeke and denounced acts of "clear harassment" to the Mexican Embassy.

    In its press release, the ministry announced that the government of Mexico has decided to grant Glas political asylum, saying the decision will be officially communicated to the Ecuadorian authorities, along with the request that they grant Blas safe conduct in accordance with the 1954 Diplomatic Asylum Convention.
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