Suspects in Ecuador assassination are Colombian, police say
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[August 11, 2023]
By Alexandra Valencia
QUITO (Reuters) -One dead suspect and six others arrested in the
assassination of Ecuadorean presidential candidate Fernando
Villavicencio are Colombians, Ecuadorean police said on Thursday, and
the government said it was pursuing the "intellectual authors" of the
murder.
The fatal shooting on Wednesday night, less than two weeks before the
election, has sent shockwaves through the South American country,
leading some rivals to suspend campaigning and bringing the issue of
rising violence to the foreground.
Villavicencio, a vocal critic of corruption and organized crime, was
killed leaving an evening campaign event at an education facility in
northern Quito.
The deceased suspect died of injuries sustained in a shoot-out, the
attorney general's office said on Wednesday. Nine people, including a
candidate for the legislature and two police officers, were injured, it
added.
The dead suspect had been arrested on weapons charges in July, the
government said on Thursday, adding that the six detained men belong to
organized crime groups. The police press office confirmed their
nationalities later on Thursday afternoon.
"The national police now have the first arrests of the alleged material
authors of this abominable event and will employ all of their operative
and investigative capacity to discover the motive of this crime and its
intellectual authors," Interior Minister Juan Zapata told journalists.
The involvement of Colombian nationals in the murder is reminiscent of
the 2021 killing of Haiti's President Jovenel Moise, who was
assassinated in his home by a group which included 26 Colombians and two
Haitian-Americans.
President Guillermo Lasso said the crime was clearly an attempt to
sabotage the election, but that voting would go ahead as planned on Aug.
20, albeit amid a national state of emergency.
Lasso, who declared three days of mourning, said on Thursday he has
asked the U.S. Federal Bureau of Investigation for help with the
investigation and that a delegation would arrive in the country in the
coming hours. The FBI confirmed it was assisting.
Violence in Ecuador has surged in recent years, especially in cities
along drug-trafficking routes like Guayaquil and Esmeraldas where
citizens say they live in fear.
Several Latin American countries have seen similar issues since the
coronavirus pandemic.
The armed forces were deploying all over the country and would remain
deployed until the end of the electoral process, Defense Minister Luis
Lara told journalists.
"Citizens have the guarantee that the armed forces will provide the
necessary security for the realization of the vote, the vote of
Ecuadoreans will be the best response to the mafias and their allies,"
he said.
Villavicencio's party Movimiento Construye on Thursday rejected what it
said was "political use" of his death and called for a speedy
investigation in a statement posted on X, the social media site
previously known as Twitter.
The party condemned an unverified video circulating on social media
purportedly from a gang called Los Lobos, or The Wolves, claiming
responsibility for Villavicencio's killing, alleging he had received
millions of dollars from them for his campaign and threatening fellow
candidate Jan Topic.
Neither the police nor the attorney general's office responded to
requests for comment about the authenticity or origin of the video,
which features more than a dozen black-clad and masked men waving
high-powered rifles.
Movimiento Construye said: "Those who sit to negotiate with mafiosos,
those who give them microphones, those who generate fear campaigns with
trick videos in the name of criminal organizations and who take the name
of Fernando Villavicencio in vain with lies are responsible for the
crime."
Los Lobos have thousands of members, according to some reports, and are
active in the country's violent prison system.
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Police officers stand next to seized
firearms, in the aftermath of the killing of Ecuadorean presidential
candidate Fernando Villavicencio, in a location given as Quito,
Ecuador in this screen grab from a video released on August 10,
2023. Policia Nacional de Ecuador/Handout via REUTERS
Former President Rafael Correa, who was heavily criticized in office
by Villavicencio, then a journalist, re-posted the video overnight,
but said in a post on Thursday morning that it was fake, without
providing more information.
Villavicencio had been sentenced to 18 months in prison for
defamation over statements made against the former president, but he
fled to Indigenous territory within Ecuador and later was given
asylum in Peru, before returning after Correa left office.
BALLOT BOX JUSTICE
Candidate Luisa Gonzalez, who is running for Correa's party and
leading with 29.3% support, expressed horror at the killing, but did
not suspend her campaign.
Indigenous candidate Yaku Perez and law-and-order hopeful Topic both
suspended their campaigns, while businessman Otto Sonnenholzner
begged the government to take action.
Perez said he hoped to hold a meeting with the other candidates and
the Catholic Church to discuss a "national security agreement,"
without providing further details.
Villavicencio's party said on Wednesday that discussions had been
held about whether to suspend campaigning due to recent political
violence, including the July murder of the mayor of Manta.
Villavicencio opposed a suspension, it said, saying it would be an
act of cowardice.
The party can choose another candidate, the electoral court said,
but ballots have already been printed and distributed and
Villavicencio's name and photo appear on them.
The party said in a Thursday statement it would take time to mourn
before making decisions about the vote and asked for international
oversight on the investigation.
"The only comfort left to us is to valiantly vote and see justice
done at the ballot box," it said.
Villavicencio, who police said had three rings of security on
Wednesday, had on Tuesday made a report to the attorney general's
office about an oil business, but no further details of his report
were made public.
There were 3,500 violent deaths in Ecuador in the first half of the
year, according to police figures, with nearly half occurring in the
largest city, Guayaquil.
Lasso, who called the elections early amid an impeachment bid
against him, has been criticized for failing to tamp down violence,
despite using emergency powers to authorize soldiers to patrol the
streets and use their weapons against criminals.
His government blames bloodshed on the streets and in prisons on
criminal infighting to control drug trafficking routes used by
Mexican cartels, the Albanian mafia and others.
Beyond security, employment and migration are major issues in the
presidential contest.
Villavicencio, a married father, had 7.5% support in polls, placing
him fifth out of eight candidates.
His body will be released to two people chosen by his wife,
including his lawyer, the attorney general's office said on X.
Countries lined up to condemn his assassination and call for a full
investigation.
(Reporting by Alexandra Valencia and Tito Correa in Quito and Julia
Symmes Cobb in Bogota; additional reporting by Doina Chiacu in
Washington and Oliver Griffin in Bogota, Writing by Julia Symmes
Cobb; Editing by Philippa Fletcher and Rosalba O'Brien)
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