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Thread: Turmoil in Ecuador

  1. Link to Post #161
    Avalon Member norman's Avatar
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    Default Re: Turmoil in Ecuador

    https://x.com/MayadeenEnglish/status...19510027375039



    https://english.almayadeen.net/news/...ncy-over-energ


    Ecuadorian President announces state of emergency over energy crisis
    Due to a massive energy crisis in Ecuador, its President Daniel Noboa has announced a two-month state of emergency in the country.

    Expreso news agency quoted Noboa's decree as saying that the state of emergency would be declared "in connection with serious domestic unrest and public disasters throughout the country, which were caused by the emergency situation in the electric energy sector, in order to secure continuous energy services."

    During the state of emergency which will be in force for two months, Ecuadorian police and armed forces will be dispatched to protect the energy infrastructure to stop potential sabotages and terrorist acts, the decree added.

    Ecuador is going through a major energy crisis caused by the shutdown of hydroelectric plants at the desiccated reservoirs, which are its main power generators.

    The country's government filed a complaint on April 17 with the prosecutor's office against 22 senior officials of the Ministry of Energy and Mines, one of whom is former Minister Andrea Arrobo, who allegedly purposely withheld information essential to the functioning of the country's energy system.

    This comes amid recent tensions between Ecuador and Mexico following a raid on the Mexican embassy raid in Quito earlier this month.

    Read more: Mexico suspends diplomatic ties with Ecuador after embassy breach

    Mexico to take Ecuador to the ICJ

    Mexico plans to pursue legal action against Ecuador at the International Court of Justice in response to the embassy raid in Quito, according to the Mexican Foreign Minister Alicia Barcena on April 8.

    Barcena announced, during an event welcoming Mexican diplomats who left Ecuador on April 7, "Starting tomorrow we are going to the ICJ where we are presenting this sad case," adding, "We believe that we can win this case quickly."

    Spain and the European Union, alongside the United Nations chief and nations from Latin America, joined in condemning Quito for the embassy raid.
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  5. Link to Post #163
    UK Avalon Founder Bill Ryan's Avatar
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    Default Re: Turmoil in Ecuador

    Quote Posted by Ravenlocke (here)
    https://x.com/MayadeenEnglish/status...19510027375039



    https://english.almayadeen.net/news/...ncy-over-energ

    Ecuadorian President announces state of emergency over energy crisis
    Due to a massive energy crisis in Ecuador, its President Daniel Noboa has announced a two-month state of emergency in the country.

    Expreso news agency quoted Noboa's decree as saying that the state of emergency would be declared "in connection with serious domestic unrest and public disasters throughout the country, which were caused by the emergency situation in the electric energy sector, in order to secure continuous energy services."

    [...]
    Many thanks indeed as always, but that's mostly sensationalized hype. (I live here! )

    The problem is El Niño transitioning to La Niña
    (the climatological intricacies of which I don't pretend to fully understand, as it's all very complicated and hard to model), and this is affecting ALL of South America at the moment with lack of rainfall.

    The dry weather is great for mountain hiking, but this is meant to be the rainy season (January—June) and it's mostly been like summer (July—December).

    So if it's not going to rain much when it's supposed to be raining, this really is an 'emergency'. Come July, things may get drier still, but no-one really knows for sure. And low reservoir levels mean the hydro-electric power stations can't work at full capacity. That's the problem.

    So there are daily power cuts now, which started a week ago, but all at announced times — easy to plan for, and most of daily life is unaffected. (Gas stations, banks, healthcare services etc are all unaffected too, and many stores, including all the largest ones, have their own generators. And the myriads of small roadside market stalls selling fresh fruit and veg don't need electricity anyway.)

    But a lot of people are pretty angry about it, blaming the government (maybe rightly) for not adequately planning ahead. So part of the declaration of 'national emergency' I suspect is a political PR ploy to try to get the people to be supportive of the measures taken and (please, please! ) not to complain too much.
    Last edited by Bill Ryan; 21st April 2024 at 01:43.

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  7. Link to Post #164
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    Default Re: Turmoil in Ecuador

    Thanks for answering Bill, I was wondering after reading the article if you had noticed or experienced electric power cuts or maybe in town they have electric shortage. And yes news sensationalize but I was surprised to see it reported by a middle eastern news outlet.
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  9. Link to Post #165
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    Default Re: Turmoil in Ecuador

    I think this is a positive.

    🇪🇨 Ecuador's Armed Forces free 43 people kidnapped by criminal gang Los Lobos

    A total of 43 people who had been kidnapped in Ecuador by the criminal gang Los Lobos were released in the municipality of Camilo Ponce Enriquez in Azuay province, where a new state of emergency is in force together with six other provinces due "serious internal unrest" and "internal armed conflict," the country's armed forces reported.

    "Military operation in the canton Camilo Ponce Enriquez sector Santa Martha [southern province of Azuay], action that allowed the rescue of 40 men and three women, during the military operation two subjects were apprehended and seized: seven rifles, two pistols, four feeders and multiple rounds of ammunition," the armed forces said in a statement on the social network X.

    https://x.com/SputnikInt/status/1808976506967781541

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  11. Link to Post #166
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    Default Re: Turmoil in Ecuador

    https://x.com/camilapress/status/1829257808115839218



    https://www.intercept.com.br/2024/08...-attacks-left/

    U.S.-Linked Prosecutor Is Behind Assault on Ecuador’s Left | Intercept Brasil

    Three bullets to the head ended a presidential campaign, sending a South American nation and parts of Washington D.C. reeling. Fernando Villavicencio, a charismatic Ecuadorian politician, had been rising in the polls in the August 2023 snap elections by promising to take on the corrupting influence of violent, organized drug cartels. Less than two weeks before the election, as the candidate walked among a cheering crowd towards his car at a campaign event, an assassin shot him dead.

    The brazen killing rocked Ecuador and brought international attention to the South American nation’s election. Villavicencio’s supporters quickly blamed leftist Rafael Correa, president from 2007 to 2017, and his party for the candidate’s assassination, without evidence.

    Then, the U.S. government got involved: First, the State Department announced a multimillion-dollar reward for information leading to those who planned the killing, and later, the FBI sent a team of agents to investigate the assassination.

    Now, leaked private messages purportedly sent by Ecuadorian Attorney General Diana Salazar, and reviewed by Drop Site News and The Intercept Brasil, reveal why the U.S. invested so many resources to investigate the candidate’s assassination: according to Salazar’s purported messages, Villavicencio was a U.S. government informant. And Salazar, who was apparently in close contact with the U.S. ambassador, helped shape a public narrative that the leftist party was to blame for the killing—a maneuver that successfully kept the Correaistas from returning to power and dramatically accelerated the Ecuadorian state’s staggering descent.

    The sensitive revelation is one of many that comes from the series of leaked chats between a former Ecuadorian assemblymember and an account he says was Salazar.

    Drop Site is the first English-language outlet to obtain complete access to the explosive chat records that reveal the inner workings of a politically motivated attack on the leading leftist political party, all with the blessing of the U.S.

    Some of the messages have been reported on by the Ecuadorian media, which has buried the story. The foreign press has largely ignored the leaks, which provide a rare and intimate look into an example of the underhanded, U.S.-backed right-wing playbook. This playbook has, over the last decade, duped much of the media, promoted reactionary movements and anti-political sentiments, rolled back social gains, and wreaked political havoc in Brazil, Peru, Guatemala, Argentina, Bolivia, Venezuela, Honduras, and beyond. Former president Donald Trump has also flirted with it, by attempting to use the U.S. Justice Department to go after political adversaries.

    The Salazar messages are now the subject of an investigation by Salazar’s colleagues and she is currently facing impeachment for “breach of duties” within the National Assembly, a process primarily led by the left-wing political party. In May, a Florida-based criminal attorney, representing an Ecuadorian man implicated in one of Salazar’s investigations, wrote a letter to the House Judiciary Committee and the Justice Department, claiming that the messages “violate several federal laws” in the U.S. The attorney recommended the U.S. blacklist Salazar for revealing “highly sensitive and confidential information” from U.S. law enforcement agencies.

    Salazar and her attorney did not respond to a request for an interview nor to a detailed list of questions from Drop Site and The Intercept Brasil. She has never denied that the chats belong to her, but Salazar has called the entire ordeal a political circus, saying that it is an attempt to “contaminate” one of her major investigations. In March, when the assemblymember began releasing the chats, Salazar said on X, formerly known as Twitter: “I will remain focused on what is important, desperation knows no bounds. They will not distract our attention.”

    Since being appointed in April 2019, Salazar has become one of Washington’s strongest allies in the country, with U.S. officials championing her as a crusader against corruption: the State Department presented her with an award; later this year, she’ll receive another award from the Woodrow Wilson Center; and Samantha Power, the USAID administrator, wrote a glowing profile of Salazar for TIME magazine. U.S. support is essential for a non-leftist with political aspirations. With the exception of Correa’s presidency, the bilateral relations have historically been so tight that in 2000 Ecuador even went so far as to replace its own currency with the dollar.

    Salazar has led a series of high-profile prosecutions to—as she has claimed—root out corruption in Ecuador, whipping up a national fever of anti-corruption and anti-political sentiments. Among the targets of investigations include the last three former presidents: Rafael Correa, Lenín Moreno, and Guillermo Lasso. (The impeachment case laid out by her political opponents accuses her of strategically accelerating cases against leftists while delaying others, including the ones implicating Lasso and Moreno, both right-wingers.)

    Now, the tranche of hundreds of private messages show Salazar may have revealed sensitive information from the investigations, lending credence to allegations by Correistas that she engaged in a pattern of politically motivated actions, including aggressively pursuing cases against left-wing politicians while simultaneously delaying cases against more pro-U.S. right-wingers.

    The messages, exchanged with Ronny Aleaga, a close confidante formerly of Correa’s party, call into question Salazar’s prosecutorial ethics and impartiality. The relationship between Aleaga and Salazar, ostensible political rivals, remains a source of mystery and intrigue in Ecuador. He told Drop Site their relationship was not romantic, but one of intimate confidence. Whatever the case, the messages, in which Salazar’s purported contact is registered as “Seño,” read as two people close to each other swapping political information, with the relationship going through twists and turns as Aleaga’s role in her investigations fluctuates. In an interview, Aleaga claimed he did not know why Salazar was sharing sensitive information regarding her investigations.

    “I am also confused,” Aleaga told Drop Site. “If we were political adversaries, why was there this communication? I’m not sure.”

    Aleaga provided Drop Site with conversations exchanged on an anonymous, private messaging platform that he recorded and saved. Drop Site and The Intercept Brasil also accessed other sensitive chats submitted as evidence in a separate criminal investigation. Overall, we reviewed over 1,500 private messages, spanning mostly from March 2023 to March of this year.

    The release of these messages comes amid a defining moment in Ecuadorian history. Not long ago, Ecuador was in many ways the envy of Latin America. Today, economic freefall, gutted social spending, and political violence by increasingly brazen narco gangs are tanking the popularity of its right-wing president, heir to a billionaire banana fortune.

    As narco violence lays bare the country’s political unraveling, two figures are attempting to seize the crisis and define the moment: current president Daniel Noboa has chosen a hard-line, U.S.-backed militarized approach to combat organized crime and Salazar continues to disrupt the political establishment by pursuing investigations she says are related to corruption and drug trafficking.

    The causes of such a dramatic reversal of national fortunes are inevitably multifaceted, but Ecuador’s fate follows a specific pattern that has roiled many countries in the region in recent years—oftentimes with secretive support of the U.S. government, ultimately benefiting U.S. corporations and their local right-wing allies.

    Among the allegations emerging from the leaked messages:

    Salazar may have delayed an investigation into businessmen linked to former right-wing president Guillermo Lasso to harm left-wing candidates during the 2023 snap elections.
    Salazar admitted the U.S. government did not want Correa’s Movimiento Revolución Ciudadana, or Citizen Revolution Movement party (RC, by its acronym in Spanish) to win the 2023 elections. “They want RC’s head,” “Seño” wrote.
    Salazar warned Aleaga of a looming investigation into his alleged corruption, and encouraged him to flee Ecuador prior to a warrant for his arrest.
    Salazar claimed that assassinated presidential candidate Fernando Villavicencio was a U.S. government informant before encouraging Aleaga to become a cooperating witness for U.S. prosecutors.
    According to the messages, for months, Salazar knew that a criminal group was responsible for the Villavicencio murder. Despite knowing this, Salazar’s office ran with the theory that the murder was orchestrated by Rafael Correa and his allies, allowing accusations against Correa to circulate, potentially playing a deciding role in the tight 2023 snap elections.
    Salazar said she suspected the FBI deleted sensitive information from Villavicencio’s phone, during their investigation into the murder, before providing the contents to Salazar’s office, which “Seño” referred to as “procedural fraud.”
    Salazar may be using her office to punish a prominent former judge who acted against U.S. government law enforcement interests.
    Salazar’s “Secretive” Relationship

    Aleaga has said publicly that between 2021 and early 2024, he and Salazar had a “secretive” relationship. Throughout that time, he said, he exchanged messages with Salazar through an encrypted platform called Confide, which deletes messages soon after they are read. As Aleaga received messages, he used another phone to video record the incoming chats. A forensic analysis ordered by Aleaga and reviewed by Drop Site confirms the messages came to Aleaga’s personal phone.

    Ahead of the October 15, 2023 second round of the snap election, Salazar visited the U.S. ambassador at his residence for a dinner, and later “Seño” texted Ronny Aleaga details. She revealed in messages to Aleaga that there were three separate FBI field offices handling the Villavicencio case: New York, Houston, and Miami.

    10/9/2023 7:00:44 AM

    Seño: Esto es heavy. Hay 3 oficinas de fbi investigando el tema. 3 oficinas federales. División Miami, NY y Houston.

    [Translation: This is heavy. There are 3 FBI offices investigating the matter. 3 federal offices. Miami division, NY, and Houston.]

    She added in a text that the U.S. was concerned the Correaistas were rising in the polls and might return to power.

    Minutes later, “Seño” made the claim that Villavicencio had been a U.S. informant. She writes that seven of the suspects in Villavicencio’s death, who had been murdered days earlier in prison, were going to be sent to New York because they had “killed an informant of the U.S. government.”

    10/9/2023 7:04:52 AM

    Seño: Es más a los detenidos los iban a llevar a NY porque mataron a un informante del gobierno usa

    [Translation: Moreover, the detainees were to be sent to NY because they killed an informant of the U.S. government.]



    The rest of the article here,
    https://www.intercept.com.br/2024/08...-attacks-left/
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    Default Re: Turmoil in Ecuador

    Hi Bill,
    I was just wondering, what do you make of this?


    https://x.com/BenjaminNorton/status/1835845436017664191



    https://x.com/BenjaminNorton/status/1750320521789739472

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    Default Re: Turmoil in Ecuador

    Quote Posted by Ravenlocke (here)
    Hi Bill,
    I was just wondering, what do you make of this?
    I don't know any details. But yes, Naboa is increasingly being seen as a US puppet.

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    Default Re: Turmoil in Ecuador

    https://x.com/camilapress/status/1852064061346746776

    "Hope is the thing with feathers that perches in the soul and sings the tune without the words and never stops at all."
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    Default Re: Turmoil in Ecuador

    https://x.com/wikileaks/status/1904329248229462064



    https://theprisma.co.uk/2025/03/24/m...y-eric-prince/

    Moral debacle: Ecuador’s agreement with the mercenary Erik Prince

    The recent alliance of Ecuadorian president Daniel Noboa with Erik Prince, a mercenary whose companies are marked by crimes and human rights violations, evidences the desperation of a ruler who faces an imminent electoral defeat on 13 April 2025.

    Since Lenín Moreno’s presidency in 2017, Ecuador has faced an economic and social debacle that has turned insecurity into its most critical problem.

    Once the second safest country in Latin America, the country now leads the region in violence and has become the main supplier of drugs to Europe. This quick deterioration, indeed, the quicker genesis of a new narco-state, has laid the groundwork for implementing of what is known as the ‘shock doctrine’, where neoliberalism takes advantage of extreme situations to impose drastic policies. In the Ecuadorian case, this tragedy is not the consequence of natural disasters or wars, but of the deliberate weakening of the state’s capability.

    The Noboa government’s statement of ‘internal war’ has not only failed to reduce violence, but has also led to human rights violations by the armed forces and police. Because of this failure, the president, backed by a part of the frightened population, has toughened laws and insists on a strategy of repression that clearly does not produce real solutions.

    The alliance with Erik Prince, founder of the controversial Blackwater (now Academi), is perhaps the most demeaning of the government’s diversionary strategies.

    Blackwater has the most extensive criminal record of its kind, for which it has been taken to court on many occasions.

    A case in point: civil action No. 1:09-cv-618, filed in 2009 in a US court (available in the WikiLeaks archives). In this lawsuit, a number of Iraqis alleged a series of crimes, including murders and acts of indiscriminate violence.

    Among the documented incidents is a shooting in July 2007, where a civilian car was shot at by mercenaries, resulting in the death of a nine-year-old boy and a baby girl, and several wounded.

    “The gunmen shot the mother in the back as she tried to protect her three-month-old daughter, who was shot in the face,” it is described. In February 2007, a 37-year-old woman was shot in the head and killed as she “was driving to her office near the Iraqi Foreign Ministry…” That same month, three security guards were killed: “One was on a balcony, they were shot for no reason, two others came to his aid and were also shot for no reason…” In July 2005 a taxi driver was shot with “…prohibited ammunition, which explodes and causes maximum physical harm…” In August 2005 a “professor of veterinary medicine at Baghdad University” was wounded “… for no other reason than to reach the checkpoint before him”. Etc. etc.

    The lawsuit accuses Erik Prince’s company of being involved in: “murder, arms smuggling, money laundering, tax evasion, kidnapping, child prostitution… destruction of evidence…”, and of failing to prevent “its employees from carrying their weapons when they are drinking alcohol or using drugs”.

    Such a lawsuit could not have been brought before the Iraqi courts, because the employees of Daniel Noboa’s new friend enjoy immunity wherever they commit crimes. The same immunity that the current Ecuador has already granted to the US-Americans in the “Status of Forces Agreement” in force since February 2024.


    Even in the United States, this lawsuit was dismissed in 2011 on the grounds that private contractors operating under government contracts in conflict zones are granted immunity.

    For a president to turn to a criminal like Prince to offer him a government contract, without this being a scandal, means that the country’s downfall is above all a moral one. But to ask for explanations from someone who boasts of invading embassies, who applauds the deportation of his own citizens and who has not complained when they have been treated like slaves, deported in chains, is futile. The questions should rather be addressed to the patriotic Ecuadorian officers: Will they allow foreign mercenaries to dictate how to act in their own country?

    Finally, an indignant reflection for every Ecuadorian who will go to the polls on 13 April: Are we going to put an end to this moral debacle that is destroying Ecuador?
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    Default Re: Turmoil in Ecuador

    https://x.com/TheGrayzoneNews/status...62376939479244



    https://thegrayzone.com/2025/04/09/v...el-conspiracy/

    VIDEO: Bombshell investigation exposes Ecuadorian president’s cartel conspiracy
    Oscar LeónApril 9, 2025

    An investigative report has placed Ecuadorian President Daniel Noboa at the center of a vast conspiracy to transform his government into a laundromat for transnational drug cartels.

    The Grayzone spoke to Andres Duran, the journalist who broke the bombshell story, and who had to go into exile to save his own life





    Ecuador teeters on the edge of a narco abyss, awash in violence, and with its dollarized economy and strategic ports transformed into a cocaine highway through Guayaquil to Europe and beyond.

    President Daniel Noboa, heir to a banana empire exporting $3.5 billion yearly, presides over a nation where austerity has gutted state power, leaving a void which cartels eagerly fill. Guayaquil, handling 70% of exports, is a sieve.

    Over 600 kilos of cocaine linked to Noboa Trading S.A. were seized between 2020 and 2024, bound for Croatia and Italy, yet no one has been held accountable. This isn’t chaos; it’s a system, one where narco cash—billions in U.S. dollars—props up a fragile state too broke to print its own money.

    To understand Ecuador’s crisis, we must first grasp the following: you can only buy drugs using cash.

    Consequently, that cash is drained from the economic system into the underworld. It’s like trying to keep a bowl full when it has a hole; you need to find a way to plug it back into the system. Our economic and social systems depend on it, because to replace it, printing money would cause inflation and dilute the current supply at an alarming rate.

    So the system needs that money back.

    The parallels to Wachovia’s 2008 banking scandal are stark, because shutting the bank down risked economic collapse after “dark cash” ceased to flow back and caused a shortage. Ecuador’s austerity, imposed since dollarization in 2000, mirrors this: after years of deep cuts, powerless police and control agencies show a state crippled, not careless and an economic and political empire, also, “too big to fail”.

    In his “war on gangs,” President Noboa has carefully avoided the Sinaloa, CJNG, and Balkan cartels. Is it possible he cut some kind of backroom deal to keep drugs and cash moving while he crushes dissent?

    The 2023 assassination of the anti-corruption crusader and presidential candidate Fernando Villavicencio by the cartel known as Los Lobos, clearly demonstrated the price of defying the cartels. Ecuador is now ruled by a narco-political order where cash trumps justice, and austerity ensures the state will not fight back.

    Cartels exploit decades of cuts, making Ecuador a laundering hub, its dollarized veins pumping narco wealth into a global system that desperately needs it.

    Andrés Durán, an Ecuadorian reporter exiled after exposing Noboa’s links, uncovered a state complicit in its own undoing.

    OSCAR LEON: “Andrés, thanks for joining us.”

    ANDRES DURAN: “Thank you, Oscar, thank you to The grayzone. I’m here to share what I’ve uncovered.”

    OSCAR LEON: “Thank you, Andres. During the presidential debate, Luisa González grilled Daniel Noboa about his family’s company trafficking cocaine—not once, but multiple times.”

    ——————

    LUISA GONZALES: …My question is clear—are you or are you not the owner of Noboa Trading, the company that exported cocaine-laced bananas in 2020, 2022, and 2024—while you were already president? Five prosecutors have been replaced, and still no answers.”

    PRESIDENT DANIEL NOBOA: “No.”

    DEBATE HOST: “Candidate Noboa, you have one minute to explain your answer.”

    PRESIDENT DANIEL NOBOA: “No, I’m not the owner—but members of my family are.”

    ————-

    OSCAR LEON: “He denies ownership, yet he said it’s his family’s. Can you unpack the importance of that?”

    ANDRES DURAN: “Absolutely. My investigation—conducted with journalists across Latin America—uncovered a scandal the Ecuadorian media tried to bury. Noboa Trading, linked to President Noboa through Inmobiliaria Zeus S.A. (Ecuador) and Lanfranco Holding S.A. (Panamá), was caught red-handed trafficking cocaine: 167 kilos in 2020, 400 kilos in 2022, and 78 kilos in 2024, all en route to Italy and Croatia.

    This isn’t speculative intelligence like Lasso’s León de Troya—it’s a blatant crime. And Noboa himself admitted on live TV that the company belongs to his family—a confession with explosive political, legal, and reputational consequences.”

    Before the president’s slip-up during the debate, these were only suspected shell companies.

    The company controls farms, trucks, and port access. On March 29, Raya magazine confirmed Durán’s findings: several police documents directly implicated Noboa Trading, making this the first case to directly link an Ecuadorian president to drug trafficking—further fueling suspicions of a cartel-state alliance.

    On April 3rd, Agência Pública (Brazil) reported that Noboa and his brother own 51% of Lanfranco Holdings, which in turn owns Noboa Trading and hundreds of other companies—an apparent attempt to conceal the president’s influence, business interests, and tax responsibilities. Noboa, notably, owes $89 million in taxes and fees to the very state he governs.

    This report confirms Durán’s long-standing investigations into the matter.

    ANDRES DURAN: “We need to add more disturbing facts and connect the dots. First, under the current president, only $5,677 was allocated to the National Police’s Ports and Airports Intelligence Unit—just over $5,000! This is the budget given to one of the most critical units fighting organized crime in the country’s ports.

    Second, regarding the 2022 case: at the time, Daniel Noboa was an assembly member representing Santa Elena province. He asked his top advisor to act as the legal representative for the only defendant in all three Noboa Trading cases—Mr. José Luis R. That advisor is now the current Minister of Health, Mr. Edgar José Lama Von Buchwald.”

    Durán points out that just a month after the arrest, the case was closed when State Attorney Julio Sánchez, who has been linked to the Los Choneros gang, refused to press charges against José Luis R., whose sole job is to be the legal representative responsible for the company, during container inspections. Consequently, José Luis R. was legally deemed not responsible for the “drug contamination.” Yet despite this, the case was closed, and no investigation was launched to identify the actual perpetrators.

    ANDRES DURAN: “So while Noboa publicly claims, ‘It’s not my company, I have nothing to do with it… but my relatives are involved,’ we must ask: if it’s not his company, why did he assign his top advisor to defend the sole suspect in the case?

    At the time, Lama Von Buchwald was Noboa’s closest advisor, and yet he became the legal representative for the only defendant in the Noboa Trading cocaine trafficking cases—despite being a public official, which legally disqualified him from serving as a defense attorney.

    These are just some of the irregularities. And to all that, let’s add another name: Ms. María Beatriz Moreno Heredia—accused of illicit trafficking of controlled substances. What exactly was her role?”

    María Beatriz Moreno, national president of ADN, has been charged, along with four others, with the alleged crime of illicit trafficking of controlled substances since August 2024, when she was arrested in connection with the seizure of 1.3 tons of cocaine. Moreno, who was released the same night, also serves as manager of other companies in the Noboa group, such as Nobexport S.A and even Vinazín S.A, and Agroindustrias San Esteban C.A., which have been recently involved in corruption scandals.

    ————————————-

    LUISA GONZÁLEZ: “Dear Ecuadorians, go on social media right now and look into Noboa Trading—drugs have been exported in banana boxes from the Noboa company, owned by Mr. Daniel Noboa, to Croatia and Italy. Drugs! So, the one making deals with you… or the mafias is you, Mr. Noboa.

    Let’s talk about money laundering—according to that same leaked chat, drug money is being laundered in banks today, something I will fight. And let’s not forget: your family owns banks too.

    Now let me ask: who is financing political parties and campaigns with drug money? You are. María Moreno, linked to drug trafficking, is president of your party and manages nine companies within the Noboa Group. Stop lying to the Ecuadorian people.”

    DEBATE HOST: “Time for candidate Noboa’s second interpellation. You have 30 seconds.”

    PRESIDENT DANIEL NOBOA: “Luisa, you’re a lawyer—you should know that if a company alerts the National Police about contamination, it means it’s cooperating, not complicit, as you claim. Meanwhile, your friends are still walking free. Do you recognize Maduro’s dictatorship, Luisa?”

    DEBATE HOST: “Candidate González: You have one minute to respond.”

    LUISA GONZÁLEZ: “Once again: Noboa Trading—an Ecuadorian company owned by Mr. Noboa—was caught exporting drugs in banana boxes in 2020, 2022, and 2024. Five prosecutors have been replaced. To this day, the case remains unresolved.

    The real pact with mafias is yours. And you still haven’t answered: why is the president of your political party involved in a drug trafficking case? The Prosecutor’s Office removed her name from the system, and only after public outcry did they restore the data.

    So again: who’s funding political campaigns with drug money?

    ———————————-

    A few days after the debate, María Moreno was acquitted.

    ANDRES DURAN: “There’s also the case of the manager of Transmabo, who has been charged twice with cocaine trafficking. So, are these just coincidences? Absolutely not. These are not coincidences—because Noboa has had the power to tighten control over the banana inspection system, UniBanano, and he hasn’t.

    In fact, his Minister of Agriculture has been complicit in the so-called ‘drug contamination’ that several banana-exporting companies in Ecuador face on a daily basis.”

    OSCAR LEON: “Noboa’s defenders would say someone else contaminated his containers, not him. What’s your response to that?”

    ANDRES DURAN: “That excuse doesn’t hold. These containers have refrigeration recorders that track temperature 24/7 from Guayaquil to Europe—any opening is logged. Yet in none of these cases was the data checked. Trucks are equipped with GPS, but no stop records were reviewed. Noboa Trading owns the entire chain—farms, transport, and Blasti S.A.’s container yards. Hiding 400 kilos requires at least 15 people working in coordination—it’s not the work of a lone saboteur. No forensic investigation was conducted. The omission screams complicity.”

    A single individual—legally declared incapacitated—was charged in all three cases, which remain unresolved. What’s alarming is that those responsible for contaminating the shipments have not been investigated or arrested. As Durán points out, this type of concealed contamination requires heavy industrial machinery and a full-scale metalworking operation—something impossible to hide. We’re not talking about a jute sack tucked away somewhere.

    ANDRES DURAN: “To do that kind of thing, you need at least 15 people, at least 15 people. That is, 15 people gained access to the yard, the truck, or the container depot belonging to the company, Blasti Sociedad Anónima Property of the President of the Republic and his family, to carry out the contamination. 15 people who weren’t identified by security, 15 people who entered the house like Peter in his own house.”

    Durán points out that amid a falling commodity market, the contrast in returns for investors is stark: per icontainers a container with 29 tons of bananas is worth between $12000 and $18000, while a single container carrying a ton of cocaine is worth around 37 million, according to (Europol/UNODC).

    Given that only 10% of containers are searched, the numbers seem to speak for themselves—especially in a system built on impunity.

    On January 24 in Madrid, President Daniel Noboa hosted a lavish party at a Japanese restaurant—a night of excess during which he was reportedly seen throwing money in the air and calling for a celebration.

    Spain’s Ministry of the Interior later filed a formal complaint over the use of official vehicles during the event. The Ecuadorian government denied the report as ‘false.’

    However, Spain’s El Debate revealed that the $15,000 in cash used to pay for the party came from León Van Parys, a fruit importer working with Noboa Trading, who allegedly labeled the payment as ‘an advance’ after covering expenses for Noboa’s assistant. Van Parys, is a European banana partner of the Noboa Group.

    Despite portraying himself as a conservative family man, Noboa is known for a rather liberal private life. During the presidential debate, he was even challenged to take an anti-doping test. Instead of addressing the request, he ignored it and quickly changed the subject.

    ———————————-

    LUISA GONZALES: “I invite you, let’s call, let’s have someone give us a drug test when we leave here. And to everyone, clearly, we want to educate our young people”.

    Between 2005 and 2010, U.S. federal agents investigated Wachovia for laundering $378.4 billion for drug cartels. The bank was fined just $160 million—a mere fraction of the money moved.

    The Noboa Trading case follows a similar playbook: lax oversight, massive laundering, and a symbolic penalty that keeps the system intact.

    Ecuador’s dollarized economy, weakened by years of austerity, may rely on this illicit cash flow even more than Wachovia once did. Government estimates place cartel money circulating in the country between $3 TO $5 BILLION ANNUALLY, though the true figures remain unverifiable.

    Against this backdrop, Noboa’s $5,677 budget for the Port Intelligence Police is laughable. And yet, the pipeline remains wide open—just as Wachovia’s slap on the wrist preserved its liquidity.

    Ecuador now resembles a bank “too geopolitically big to fail,” recycling narco-dollars into a state that can’t print its own currency—ultimately feeding the global financial system.

    ———————————-

    OSCAR LEON: “We’ve seen ties between the government, the Balkan Mafia, and the Mexican Cartels under Lasso. Does that continue with Noboa?”

    ANDRES DURAN: “No. What’s happening in Ecuador is a shift—a transfer of power from the financial mafia to the exporting mafia. That’s the reality.

    If you examine the León de Troya report closely, you’ll find even more—like the unresolved case of Banco de Guayaquil, former President Guillermo Lasso’s bank, which facilitated money transfers for the Albanian mafia.

    I have capital integration certificates linked to several individuals connected to the Albanian mafia, some of whom also have ties to Banco Litoral, owned by the Noboa family. These connections paint a grim picture of the Ecuadorian state. We must continue digging to expose those involved in organized crime—whether through banking or the Banana Control System.

    And who orchestrated the deregulation and dismantling of that system? Bernardo Manzano. While serving as Guillermo Lasso’s Minister of Agriculture, he also held a senior role in the Noboa Group, where he worked for nearly 18 years.

    These facts speak volumes about the current administration. In the end, they turned me—a journalist—into an exile.”

    Noboa’s rise is closely linked to the assassination of presidential candidate Fernando Villavicencio. Although the blame initially fell on Correísta candidate Luisa González, authorities knew from the outset that the Los Lobos gang was responsible. Leaked chats from Attorney General Diana Salazar, revealed in August 2024, confirmed this. The damage to González’s campaign cleared the way for Noboa to present himself as a safer, alternative candidate.

    The circumstances of the murder point to state complicity. Villavicencio’s armored vehicle arrived late to the designated back exit, yet he was inexplicably directed through the crowded front entrance with only two guards. Additional agents assigned after previous threats did nothing. Frame-by-frame footage shows a gunshot fired near his own escorts. He was also alone in the car—violating established security protocols.

    The lead gunman later died in police custody, raising suspicions of a cover-up. Just hours afterward, police raided three locations and arrested six Colombians carrying weapons and phones allegedly linked to opposition politicians. Was this a swift law enforcement response—or a carefully staged operation?

    Los Lobos, affiliated with Mexico’s CJNG and Balkan cartels, claimed responsibility for the murder. By October 2023, the rest of the hitmen had been silenced in prison. Daniel Noboa, who was sworn in on November 23, 2023, now controls Ecuador’s banana exports, military, police, and port infrastructure, all critical to cocaine shipments to Europe, yet trafficking has not been curbed, not even at his own companies.

    Villavicencio’s plans to militarize ports and build a supermax prison directly threatened these routes. Even Mexican President Andrés Manuel López Obrador hinted at state involvement.

    On January 7th 2024, Los Choneros leader “Fito” escaped from prison. Just 2 days later, Los Lobos staged a violent takeover of TC Televisión in January 2024. The incident gave Noboa justification to declare a “war on gangs,” though curiously, this campaign excluded cartels and money-laundering networks.

    Noboa’s selective crackdown on street gangs—while his family’s banana empire is repeatedly tied to cocaine shipments—suggests either deep complicity or profound helplessness within a cartel-state structure inherited from the Lasso administration.

    Former President Guillermo Lasso’s brother-in-law, Danilo Carrera, collaborated with Rubén Cherres, a figure linked to the Albanian narco-network. Cherres operated with impunity until his assassination in 2023. The León de Troya report exposed wide-ranging connections to drug trafficking, influence peddling, and high-level corruption—prompting three separate investigations.

    Despite U.S. lawmakers urging President Biden to respond to Ecuador’s growing cartel ties, no meaningful action followed. Years of austerity created a power vacuum now occupied by organized crime. Under Noboa’s leadership, the state appears either unwilling—or unable—to regain control.

    OSCAR LEON: “You faced threats and exile. What happened?”

    ANDRES DURAN: “It began in October 2023, at the Esmeraldas Provincial Authority when I investigated property irregularities involving the Prefect. This woman had several inconsistencies in her assets. After posting about them at least three times, I received threats.

    As a result, I was placed in the Victim and Witness Protection System—until four days before the first election round, when they expelled me without explanation. They claimed I violated protocol, which only involved sporadic home visits to check if I was alive.

    In 2024, after exposing that Dritan Gjika’s companies were still operating and laundering money through mining, I received another threat—a call from the Albanian mafia. Yet, the State and the protection system did nothing. Instead, legal harassment against me continued.”

    Dritan Gjika, an Albanian national, arrived in Guayaquil in 2009 and, over 13 years, frequently traveled across Europe and Latin America. He built a network of 71 companies in Ecuador, spanning construction, agriculture, and real estate—allegedly to facilitate drug trafficking and money laundering.

    By December 2022, Gjika fled to Dubai and remains a fugitive with an active Interpol red notice. Investigators found that his companies, many of which should be closed, are still operating as fronts for illicit activities, extending his influence across Ecuador’s economy.\

    ANDRES DURAN: “I got a lawsuit from alleged operators of a very dangerous criminal gang called Los Choneros. These brothers from the province of Los Ríos, whom I hadn’t even mentioned—the plaintiff wasn’t even part of my investigation. Later we learned that the inmate who sued me was, at the time, the romantic partner of Diana Salazar, the Attorney General of the Nation.”

    Attorney General Diana Salazar stands at the center of several growing scandals. Her reputation came under fire after leaked chats—first reported in The Grayzone’s August 2024 exposé—suggested she acts as a pawn of the U.S. Embassy and Ecuador’s right-wing elite.

    The messages allegedly show her coordinating with U.S. agents to shield allies of Presidents Guillermo Lasso and Daniel Noboa, while aggressively targeting opposition figures.

    Critics claim that Salazar’s selective justice, backed by chats that suggest US pressure, guarantees impunity for the right, consolidating a political order where Noboa thrives and leftist dissent is crushed.

    OSCAR LEON: “It seems that in Ecuador, drug trafficking and money laundering sustain both society and the global banking system, while the so-called war on gangs targets low-level operatives, disposable foot soldiers easily replaced, while ignoring the cartels and money laundering structures.”

    ANDRES DURÁN: “When President Guillermo Lasso took office, he was already compromised. The National Police had been monitoring active members of the Albanian mafia, including one of his campaign financiers, Rubén Lleras. Lleras’ ties to Rubén Cherres—and through him, to Albanian mafia leader Dritan Gjika—show that these criminal networks extend far beyond politics. We’re not just talking about narco-politicians; these are businessmen, especially in the financial sector. The mafia even had direct links to one of Ecuador’s major banks.

    Another major issue is the collapse of the country’s security policy. U.S. Ambassador Michael Fitzpatrick publicly stated that Ecuador has ‘narco-generals, narco-judges, and narco-prosecutors,’ yet no investigations followed. I was the first journalist to file a criminal complaint against four National Police generals for covering up the ‘León de Troya’ report, which exposed Lasso’s ties to the Albanian mafia. Nothing was done.

    Meanwhile, the government accelerated deregulation in the banana industry—a known conduit for drug trafficking. Executive decrees enabled fraudulent export quotas, including the infamous ‘F code’ used to smuggle cocaine in banana shipments. Criminal organizations infiltrated security forces, as revealed in the Metástasis case, where two police officers involved in money laundering remain on active duty.

    Ecuador’s dollarized economy makes it an ideal hub for laundering illicit funds, yet the lack of financial oversight continues to fuel corruption and violence. This isn’t mere negligence—it points to systemic complicity.”

    While he was able to escape, Durán’s fate somehow threatened to mirror Villavicencio’s. Endanger the cash machine, and you’re gone.

    The machine never stops. Since 2018, Ecuador has become a key node in the global cocaine trade. At least 17 reported seizures of drug-laced fruit containers—mostly bananas—have occurred across destinations like Russia, Spain, Italy, Germany, Turkey, and the U.S., totaling over 38 tons where quantities are disclosed (Reuters, BBC, Nexta TV, EL PAÍS English, Revista RAYA).

    These busts reveal how Ecuador’s banana exports have been systematically used to smuggle cocaine. Highlights include 257 kilos seized in Russia in 2018, 3 tons in Ecuador headed to Russia in 2023, 6.2 tons in Posorja in 2024, and a record-breaking 13 tons intercepted in Spain that same year. Most likely, these reports only scratch the surface. Smaller domestic seizures and interceptions in transit hubs like Panama often go unreported.

    And while Luisa González mentioned only 3 cases, out of the 17 documented cases, at least five are directly linked to the Noboa Group—through Noboa Trading S.A. or affiliates like Bonita Banana.

    Five Noboa Group-Linked Cases Since 2018 with Linksr

    2020 – 167 kg to Italy (Noboa Trading S.A.)

    Details: 167 kg of cocaine was seized in banana containers shipped by Noboa Trading S.A., intercepted at an Italian port (likely Gioia Tauro or Livorno). Part of Andrés Durán’s 600+ kg total for Noboa since 2020.

    June 30, 2022 – 260 kg at Naportec, Guayaquil (Noboa Trading S.A.)

    Details: 260 kg of cocaine was found in Noboa Trading banana containers at Naportec port, Guayaquil, tied to José Luis Rivera Baquerizo’s arrest (later released). Pre-export, intended for Europe.

    2022 – 400 kg to Croatia (Noboa Trading S.A.)

    Details: 400 kg of cocaine was seized in Noboa Trading banana shipments at a Croatian port (likely Rijeka), within Durán’s 600+ kg tally.

    2024 – 600 kg to Mersin, Turkey (Banana Bonita)

    Details: 600 kg of cocaine was seized at Mersin port in banana boxes branded “Banana Bonita,” a Noboa Group entity under Fruit Shippers Ltd., by Turkish customs.

    March 23, 2025 – 324 kg to Italy (Noboa Trading S.A.)

    Details: 324 kg of cocaine was seized in Ecuador, destined for Italy in Noboa Trading banana boxes, confirmed by police docs and ADN40. X posts (@radiolacalle) support this.

    Sources: Revista RAYA, “Empresa de familia de Daniel Noboa, presidente de Ecuador, involucrada en tráfico de cocaína a Europa,” March 25, 2025.
    Link: https://revistaraya.com/empresa-de-f...aina-a-europa/

    These account for 1,751 kilos of cocaine seized between 2020 and 2025, as confirmed by ADN40, Revista RAYA & Andrés Durán.

    The remaining 12 busts involve other exporters or unnamed firms. The data suggests that Noboa, whether by action or omission, is deeply involved, but not alone, in Ecuador’s narco-export network.

    To understand the scale, consider this: Guayaquil—handling 70% of Ecuador’s exports—moved around 325,000 banana containers in 2023 alone (AP News, September 3, 2023).

    Between 2018 and 2023, that likely totals 2 to 2.5 million containers. Yet fewer than 40 containers have been caught with cocaine. That’s less than 0.002%—virtually nothing.

    Even factoring in possible unreported seizures—some estimates suggest 80 tons in 2024 alone, or roughly 4,000 containers—the interception rate might rise to 1 in 500. Still, the odds overwhelmingly favor traffickers. The scale of Guayaquil’s shipping volume offers cover, allowing narco-exports to flow with near impunity.

    Ecuador’s ports are a hub for world cocaine trafficking, while its dolarized, deregulated system is a laundering paradise, feeding a global need for narco cash. A well-oiled system, unpunished, essential, and deadly.
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    Default Re: Turmoil in Ecuador

    https://x.com/TheInsiderPaper/status...63599274197487




    https://x.com/AJEnglish/status/1913638731829121160



    https://www.aljazeera.com/news/2025/...resident-noboa

    Ecuador accuses ‘bad losers’ of assassination plot against President Noboa
    Government says on ‘maximum alert’ due to bid by rivals to kill re-elected president.

    Ecuador has declared a state of “maximum alert” over an assassination plot against President Daniel Noboa.

    In a statement entitled “The revenge of the bad losers” issued early on Saturday, the Ministry of Government said “all security protocols have been activated” due to the threat emanating from “criminal organizations, in collusion with political groups defeated at the polls”.

    Noboa was re-elected earlier this month, promising to continue a crackdown on rampant cartel violence that plagues Ecuador. His opponent, Luisa Gonzalez, has continued to insist that the vote was fraudulent.

    The statement follows the leak earlier this week of a military intelligence report that said assassins entering Ecuador from Mexico and other countries planned to carry out “terrorist attacks” against Noboa.

    The government statement alleges that “bad losers” from the recent April 13 election hired sicarios (hitmen) from Mexico and other countries in a bid to destabilise the government.

    “The state is on high alert. All security protocols have been activated, and the Armed Forces, the National Police, and intelligence agencies are working together,” it reads.

    Quoting intelligence sources, it reports “the plotting of an assassination, terrorist attacks, and street riots through violent demonstrations”.

    The plot targets “the life of the President of the Republic, state authorities, and public officials”, it said.

    Although not offering names, the statement appears to accuse the Citizen Revolution Movement (RC5) of which Gonzalez is leader and that is linked to former President Rafael Correa, of planning the attack.

    Media reports in Ecuador also suggested that support may have been forthcoming from foreign leaders including President Claudia Sheinbaum of Mexico.

    Amid a diplomatic fallout that launched last year, Sheinbaum announced on Wednesday that Mexico would not restore diplomatic relations with Ecuador as long as Noboa remains in office.

    The Mexican leader had publicly supported Gonzalez in the election.

    The reported assassination plot comes amid a pattern of escalating violence in Ecuador, including the assassination of presidential candidate Fernando Villavicencio in 2023.

    Rampant violence by criminal gangs involved in trafficking from the world’s biggest cocaine producers, neighbouring Peru and Colombia, has also blighted the country.

    In the latest instance, at least 12 people were killed on Friday in an attack in the coastal province of Manabi as gunmen dressed in fake military uniforms opened fire on spectators at a cockfight.

    Noboa declared an “internal armed conflict” to combat drug gangs in January last year, reflecting the country’s ongoing struggle with organised crime.

    Alongside a promise to boost the country’s flagging economy, that was seen as key to helping him win re-election earlier this month.

    However, Gonzalez, who had entered the run-off vote following a tight first round in February and claimed “grotesque” fraud, said late on Wednesday that she plans to contest the results with the elections authority.
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    Default Re: Turmoil in Ecuador

    https://x.com/KawsachunNews/status/1912537401383133368



    ¤=[Post Update]=¤

    https://x.com/camilapress/status/1912976726860128501

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    Default Re: Turmoil in Ecuador

    https://x.com/KawsachunNews/status/1911703268784222292



    https://kawsachun.com/noboa-commits-...s-runoff-vote/

    Noboa commits "grotesque electoral fraud" in Ecuador's runoff vote

    Presidential candidate of the Citizens’ Revolution Luisa González addresses a crowd of supporters on election night in Quito.

    Luisa González is contesting the National Electoral Council (CNE) vote count and demanding a recount following Sunday’s presidential election runoff. The presidential candidate of the Citizens’ Revolution addressed supporters who packed the campaign house on Reina Victoria Avenue, in the city of Quito.

    She thanked those who support her political project and was energetic in expressing that the Citizens’ Revolution has always recognized defeats at the polls, but not this time, “On behalf of the people we represent we do not recognize the results presented by the CNE”.

    “I refuse to believe that there is a people that prefers lies before the truth, violence before peace and unity, I categorically refuse to believe it… we are going to ask for a recount and that the ballot boxes be opened”.

    Figures shown on the official website of the CNE positioned González trailing incumbent Daniel Noboa by 11-points, with 96.94% of votes counted—despite that exit polls showed the candidates with a margin of only four points, and at least one widely published exit poll gave González the victory.

    At the same time, nearly all voter intention surveys conducted in the weeks leading up to the vote showed González poised to win the runoff.

    Her campaign received many key endorsements ahead of the second round, including from the Pachakutik indigenous movement, whose candidate Leonidas Iza came in third in the first round.

    Noboa, who’s name has become associated with corruption and narco-trafficking, took drastic measures alongside the CNE authorities in the final days before the contest, including decreeing a state of exception in seven provinces, closing land borders, preventing international observers from entering the country, suspending the vote for Ecuadorians in Venezuela, and relocating polling stations just hours before the vote.

    Luisa’s supporters chanted “fraud” and “you are not alone”, during her speech.

    The candidate denounced the abuse of power exercised by the current president, who never asked for a license to campaign, and decreed a state of exception, among other irregularities.

    “There are about 11 statistical investigations, 11 surveys in which even those of the government itself gave us the victory, the exit poll gave us the victory, then “I denounce before the people, before the world that Ecuador is living a dictatorship and we are facing the worst and most grotesque electoral fraud in the history of the Republic of Ecuador” she expressed with confidence.

    The candidate emphasized how little credible is the idea that votes had not increased since the first round of elections in February and called for unity and to be attentive to what happens in the coming hours. “We will continue in the fight” she concluded.

    Earlier in the day, left-wing and progressive parties in Ecuador expressed concern over the series of irregularities by the National Electoral Council (CNE) and the government of presidential candidate Daniel Noboa, implemented just hours before the vote.

    The Antifascist International Ecuador Chapter and the International Collective of CELAC Social denounced fraud in Sunday’s vote and called for active and organized resistance by Ecuadorians. A statement released by the Executive Secretariat of the Bolivarian Alliance, ALBA-TCP, stated that irregularities in Ecuador’s runoff election suggests “the execution of a clear premeditated electoral fraud.”
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    Default Re: Turmoil in Ecuador

    https://x.com/ProgIntl/status/1912548830006112317

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    Default Re: Turmoil in Ecuador

    Quote Posted by Ravenlocke (here)
    https://x.com/KawsachunNews/status/1911703268784222292

    Noboa commits "grotesque electoral fraud" in Ecuador's runoff vote
    Yes, everyone's talking about it. The opinion polls were too close to call, and many (self included) were expecting Luisa Gonzalez to win, as her support was visibly growing every day as the election approached. But suddenly Noboa (who is a US puppet) somehow won by a landslide.

    No-one's buying it... but fraud may be as impossible to prove legally as it was in the US in 2020.

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    Default Re: Turmoil in Ecuador

    🇪🇨🇪🇨🇪🇨
    Ecuadorians, I hope we learn from history so as not to be deceived anymore:
    - Coca Codo Sinclair is the largest investment in the history of 🇪🇨.
    - Cracks, settlements, leaks, etc., are common problems in a project of this magnitude, and what is done is to fix them.
    - Fixing the cracks in CCS costs between 25 and 60 million dollars—depending on the technical solution—in a project worth 2.5 billion. Why wasn’t it done? Because leaving things unresolved is more profitable for politicking and privatization.
    - What government is going to invest if any construction flaw is not the fault of the contractor or the supervisor, but of the government itself? Let’s have some common sense!🤦🏽
    - All kinds of nonsense has been said: poorly located, lack of water, no reservoir, etc. CCS is a run-of-the-river plant, not a reservoir-based one, and its studies were conducted and improved over decades by various technical teams. It has a 600-meter water drop over a very short distance. The water reaches the turbines at the speed of a Formula 1 car. It is designed to withstand an earthquake of 9 on the Richter scale. If that were to happen, CCS would be the least of our worries.
    #LosCorruptosSiempreFueronEllos


    https://x.com/MashiRafael/status/1846054025013481909

    "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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    Default Re: Turmoil in Ecuador

    Coca Codo is a run-of-river power plant, meaning it has no reservoir; it’s just the channeled water -at the speed of a Formula 1 car- that drives the turbines. Therefore, it’s necessary to make the most of all the energy it can generate.

    A hydroelectric plant with a reservoir, like Mazar, is different.
    The reservoir is a RESERVE of energy and must be managed wisely. This was one of the fatal mistakes of the Government: not reaching the dry season with the reservoirs at their maximum level.
    #LosCorruptosSiempreFueronEllos

    https://x.com/MashiRafael/status/1850919960618430819

    "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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    Default Re: Turmoil in Ecuador

    Reported as of January 2024

    Auto-translated by Grok
    #CocaCodoSinclair we seek TRUTH.
    Members of the Oversight Committee visited the hydroelectric plant along with @RecNaturalesEC and we confirmed:

    💡It has generated FIFTY MILLION KW/H, which means 2 years of continuous electricity for all of Ecuador.

    💡It has provided 7 years of uninterrupted clean energy.

    💡It is the largest and highest-producing hydroelectric plant in the country.

    💡Its structure is solid, it will not explode or break. Its infrastructure will last

    https://x.com/pameaguirre1/status/1751318073468965216




    Auto-translated by Grok
    #CocaCodoSinClair 1500 mw/h operating at its maximum capacity during the dry season.

    💡Prevented blackouts of 8 to 10 hours daily during the electrical crisis.

    💡Avoided the emission of nearly 28 million tons of CO2.

    💡Has saved the country approximately $1.582 billion by reducing the use of fossil fuels in energy generation.

    🧵
    Translated from Spanish by Grok
    Without a doubt, #CocaCodoSinclair is 100% operational. The intake, reservoir, machine house, turbines, and tunnel are functioning normally.

    ⚙️It has 8 operational turbines; yesterday, seven were in operation, and one was undergoing preventive maintenance.
    🔩It has achieved 94% progress in resolving the “pending issues” for the complete conclusion of the project.

    It generates approximately 30% of the country’s energy and, in 2023, reached a historic record of 8 BILLION KW/h.

    We highlight the efforts of the technical and administrative staff and thank them for their continuous work over 7 years, especially during the dry season.

    https://x.com/pameaguirre1/status/1751340295218757738

    "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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    Default Re: Turmoil in Ecuador

    https://x.com/GKecuador/status/1961413533431652389




    https://gk.city/2025/08/27/que-es-hi...clair-ecuador/

    5 keys to the Coca Codo Sinclair hydroelectric plant

    It provides about 28% of energy to the country, but in the season of drying its production decreases and generates a deficit at the national level. That's not the only problem it causes.

    Emilia Paz and Miño · Last updated August 27, 2025


    The Coca Codo Sinclair hydroelectric plant is the largest in Ecuador. Its power is 1500 megawatts and, depending on the time of year, it generates between 28% and 30% of the energy that the country needs. This amount can supply about 5.3 million households.

    Coca Codo was one of the emblematic projects of President Rafael Correa, who ruled between 2007 and 2017. With hydroelectric plants, the government sought to transform Ecuador's energy matrix away from the thermal generation that requires fossil fuels, such as oil.

    In May 2024, the hydroelectric power plant stopped its operation due to an accumulation of sediments in the catchment area. To protect the infrastructure, the gates were closed and, to refuel the electricity service, thermoelectric plants were activated. The interruption of the operation of the Coca Codo hydroelectric power plant aggravated the energy crisis of that year in which there were blackouts of 14 hours a day in some sectors of the country.

    But it is not the first time that hydroelectric power has caused problems to the country.

    Its construction had several questions such as the modality of the contract, which was under the figure of "try-key". That is, all the necessary contracting for the work is in the hands of the contracting company, and only once the project is ready, it is delivered to the State.

    The disadvantage of these contracts is that the supervision is much more complex because "there are no such defined delivery milestones as in other contractual processes," Andrés Lozano, co-author of the Chinese Investments report, told GK, how have they affected institutionality in Ecuador?, in 2023. This, he added, makes it difficult to take "correctives at the right times."

    The lack of revisions resulted in countless cracks in the structure, which led to lawsuits against the construction company. These problems, added to the regressive erosion of the Coca River, which is getting closer to the hydroelectric plant, have caused higher costs for Ecuador, and almost ten years after its inauguration it has not been officially delivered to the State.

    We tell you 4 keys to the Coca Codo Sinclair hydroelectric plant.

    The largest hydroelectric power plant in Ecuador

    The Coca Codo Sinclair Hydroelectric Power Plant is a megaproject that began its construction in July 2010 and was inaugurated on November 18, 2016, during the government of Rafael Correa.

    Its power is 1500 megawatts, which could supply electricity to the entire city of Quito and Guayaquil, and would be left over. Ecuador's total energy demand is about 5,000 megawatts; in May 2025, according to the National Electricity Operator (Cenace), the demand reached 5,110. Coca Codo usually supplys up to 30% of that demand.

    The hydroelectric plant is in the cantons of El Chaco, province of Napo, and Gonzalo Pizarro, province of Sucumbios. "In the heart of the Ecuadorian Amazon rainforest" as Jorge Glas, then vice president of Ecuador, said at the inauguration of the project.

    Since it began operating, in April 2016, and until July 2022 (which is the last date of official information available), it had generated just over 39,000 gigawatts for the country.

    The Coca Codo Sinclair hydroelectric plant uses water from the Quijos and Salado rivers, which form the Coca River, to generate electricity. The complex is composed in this way and works like this:

    Capture work: It remparts the water from the Coca River and directs it towards the desander, where the particles are cleaned. Then, go to the driving tunnel.
    Driving tunnel: It has a length of 24.8 kilometers and carries the captured water to the compensating reservoir.
    Compensating reservoir: It is a dam that stores water during the day and releases it during the hours of highest consumption. From here it is sent to the pressure pipes.
    Pressure pipes: They are two ducts that carry the water at high speed and pressure to the engine room.
    Engine house: It has two caverns;
    Generator cave: Pressurized water moves 8 turbines that are connected to generators that produce electricity.
    Transformer Cave: The electricity is adjusted to an adequate voltage level to be sent to the national grid.
    Used water returns to the Coca River.

    The work has not been officially delivered

    Since it was conceived, the Coca Codo Sinclair hydroelectric plant was described as a national priority and part of a strategic plan of the Correa government.

    With hydroelectric plants, the President had three objectives:

    Stop buying energy from other countries such as Colombia during dry seasons - when rivers have a minimum flow due to droughts.
    Get away from the energy generated by thermoelectric plants - in December 2018, Ecuador had 204 - and switch to cleaner and renewable energy.
    Establish an alliance with China since it was built by the Chinese company Sinohydro with financing from the EximBank of that country.
    The project initially cost about $1,979 million, according to the 2009 contract. In 2023, the cost amounted to just over $2,439 million, excluding VAT.

    In 2023, when the price exceeded $2 billion, the Corporación Eléctrica del Ecuador (Celec), which operates and administers the plant, told GK that the cost overruns come from taxes, price adjustments and exchange orders included in the agreement.

    But the value could still rise.

    Until August 2025, the hydroelectric power plant has not been officially delivered to Ecuador, due to the technical, physical and legal problems it has that were analyzed by the Comptroller General of the State, since before its construction.

    The problems of hydroelectric power are part of several special examinations carried out between 2010 and 2016 by the Comptroller General of the State.

    The Comptroller's office found that, between 2010 and 2012, there were delays in delivery schedules, lack of delivery of quality control manuals, zero verification of the state of concrete and steel, disorderly handling of documentation and invoices by Sinohydro, the construction company.

    In the special examination that analyzed what happened between 2012 and 2015, the Comptroller's offeration discovered that due to delays in the first phase of the project, Ecuador lost 81 million dollars in fine that it did not charge.

    And in the 2016 report, when the hydroelectric company began its operation, they discovered that the cost of the project reached 2 billion dollars, exceeding the original contractual amount of 1,979 million.

    In 2025, the project accumulates more than 17,000 fissures, according to Celec, so it cannot operate at 100% of its capacity.

    Another impediment to the delivery of the hydroelectric power is the international arbitration process that Celec initiated in May 2021 against Sinohydro, due to the multiple failures in the construction.

    The construction has multiple fissures

    In 2014, four years after the start of construction, and after a report from the Comptroller's S office, Sinohydro hired audits to respond to the institution's observations and certify that its teams met the standards. But the audits determined that the parts for the turbines, manufactured and shipped from China, had faults.

    In addition, in another report, the Comptroller's office says that the quality control documents of these parts and others of the hydroelectric plant had been altered and "do not cly to reality."

    That year, the inspection of the auditing company detected 7,648 cracks in the eight distributors - which carry water to the turbines - that were inside the concrete walls on the inside of the plant.

    Sinohydro - which according to a 2021 Celec report remained silent about these problems for at least two years - tried to solve the cracks by welding the metal. It is assumed that by 2015, at least three distributors were arranged that way.

    In 2019, other reports from the Comptroller's office revealed that the water was piercing the steel of the distributors and that it was already wetting the concrete that covers them. The Comptroller ordered Sinohydro to replace the eight distributors and to take over the cost. But he didn't.

    The 2018, 2019 and 2021 Celec inspections concluded that there was nothing to do with some cracks, especially those that bordered directly with the concrete. And that the pieces had to be replaced.

    By 2023 there were already more than 17,000 cracks in the distributors that had not been able to be repaired and that with the operation of the hydroelectric plant continued to grow.

    But cracks are not the only problem that presents a danger to the operation of the megaproject.

    Regressive erosion, a constant threat to the project

    The regressive erosion - when the exterior of a river sticks a lot to the slope and is eating it - of the Coca River, increasingly advances upstream and puts "at risk the water intake work of the hydroelectric," according to the government.

    According to the Celec report of August 20, 2025, regressive erosion is already 3.6 kilometers from the Coca Codo capture works. If it reaches the plant, it would put its operation at risk, affect its useful life and the energy supply would be reduced.

    One of the reasons why erosion is so close to the work would be the lack of updated environmental studies before the hydroelectric power plant was built, since they ignored the problem of regressive erosion in the place - that is, on the slopes of the Coca River - according to Alfredo Carrasco, a geologist engineer, told GK in 2023.

    Erosion would be the reason why the San Rafael waterfall, located in the Cayambe-Coca National Park, disappeared on February 2, 2020.

    In the study Coca Codo Sinclair & the erosive process in the high Coca, of the Andean Rivers Observatory, of June 2021, he says that for the cause of the collapse of the San Rafael waterfall there are two hypotheses that "must be analyzed through more scientific studies."

    The first is that it was a purely natural phenomenon and that it was known that sooner or later it would happen since since the 1980s there were reports that warned of erosion.

    Carrasco told GK that there was negligence on the part of the State not to "understand this erosion process, nor to do the appropriate monitoring" or update the environmental impact studies.

    The second hypothesis is that the changes in the shape of the river and the terrain caused by the construction of the Coca Codo Sinclair capture work "could play a decisive role in the weakening and collapse of the waterfall," says the report.

    He also mentions that since the collapse of the waterfall "the erosive process has advanced at an alarming rate of approximately 8 kilometers in less than nine months." And that the number is still increasing.

    In August 2025, the government of Daniel Noboa, through the Ministry of Energy and Mines and Celec, says it is carrying out "urgent and permanent actions to protect the water capture" of Coca Codo.

    For the government, the regressive erosion of the Coca River is "a unique natural phenomenon in the world that threatens the most important generation infrastructure in the country."

    Some of the temporary actions, according to the government statement, are making large rock walls, stabilization of slopes and partial detours of the river. The permanent solutions are:

    Make an underground structure downstream of the catchment to stop erosion and protect the water intakes of the plant (it was completed in 2023)
    Build a permeable dam to widen the width of the river and reduce the strength of the water (according to the government, it has a 60% advance)
    A stepped landfill to dissipate the erosive power of water (according to the government, construction has not yet begun)
    And deviate two kilometers from the river (according to the government, it is still in the study phase)
    Face at least two legal problems

    Construction failures and problems with cracks that were increasing in size, led Celec to file a request for international arbitration against Sinohydro, the construction company, before the International Court of Arbitration of the International Chamber of Commerce in Santiago de Chile on May 17, 2021.

    In response, Sinohydro (a subsidiary of PowerChina, a construction group) proposed a 50-year concession, in which it would assume the repair of structural problems and sell the energy to the country.

    The arbitration is still ongoing.

    On July 8, 2025, Gabriela Sommerfeld, Minister of Foreign Affairs and Human Mobility, told Teleamazonas that PowerChina will take charge of the operation and maintenance of Coca Codo.

    He also said that the construction group agreed to pay 400 million dollars for construction failures. The money will arrive in the country until December 2026, according to the chancellor.

    That same day, Inés Manzano, Minister of Energy and Mines, at a press conference said that they also signed a conciliation agreement to "leave arbitration." "All that has a process. We have three legal documents prior to doing it," said the minister, without giving more details.

    But arbitration is not the only legal entanglement around Coca Codo.

    An investigation by the Prosecutor's Office called the Sinohydro case, formerly Ina Papers, investigates the crime of bribery in the construction of the Coca Codo Sinclair hydroelectric plant. According to the Prosecutor's Office, to build it, they would have given 76 million dollars in bribes - the highest amount of a bribe in the history of the country.

    Of the 25 people who are prosecuted, the most important character is Lenin Moreno, former president and vice president of Ecuador for whom, on April 19, 2023, the Prosecutor's Office asked for preventive detention. But the judge denied the measure and replaced it with periodic presentations. Since Moreno does not live in Ecuador, the Prosecutor's Office asked the justice system to notify Interpol to locate him.

    According to the Prosecutor's Office, in 2010, due to his close relationship and friendship with the then ambassador of the People's Republic of China in Ecuador, Cai Runguo, Moreno - then Vice President - managed to reach the financing agreement with the EximBank eight months after the signing of the contract, which required more guarantees than those agreed at the beginning.

    The money for the emblematic work arrived in June 2010.

    A month later, the Commercial company Recorsa, owned by Conto Patiño, a friend of Lenin Moreno and representative of Sinohydro in the country, opened an account at Banco Pichincha Panama.

    According to the Prosecutor's Office, it would be through that account that the Chinese company would have sent money, with transactions made from an account in the name of Sinohydro, of the Bank of China.

    75 and a half million dollars would have reached that account, according to the theory of the Prosecutor's Office. The remaining 500 thousand dollars would have been deposited in another account in Panama.

    The Prosecutor's Office says that Conto Patiño would have distributed the money to the other 36 people who are prosecuted in the case.

    In addition to Moreno, there is his wife, Rocío González, one of his daughters, Irina Moreno, and his brother, Edwin Moreno. Patiño's children and even one of his granddaughters, Victoria Patiño, are also part of the process.

    On March 23, 2023, former President Lenin Moreno wrote in his X account "I never had responsibility, attributions or capacity to influence strategic projects during Rafael Correa's government."

    In 2025, Moreno is still out of the country and the Sinohydro case is still in process.
    "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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