Ecuadorians head to polls to toughen fight against gangs behind wave of violence

21 April 2024, 06:24

Ecuador Security Referendum
Ecuador Security Referendum. Picture: PA

The majority of 11 questions posed to voters focus on tightening security measures.

Ecuadorians head to the polls on Sunday in a referendum touted by the country’s fledgling leader as a way to crack down on criminal gangs behind a spiralling wave of violence.

The majority of 11 questions posed to voters focus on tightening security measures. Proposals include deploying the army in the fight against the gangs, loosening obstacles to extradition of accused criminals and lengthening prison sentences for convicted drug traffickers.

Ecuador, traditionally one of South America’s most peaceful countries, has been rocked in recent years by a wave of violence, much of it spilling over from neighbouring Colombia, the world’s largest producer of cocaine.

Last year, the country’s homicide rate shot up to 40 deaths per 100,000, one of the highest in the region.

President Daniel Noboa has rallied popular support by confronting the gangs head on. That task became more urgent in January when masked gunmen, some on orders from imprisoned drug traffickers, terrorised residents and took control of a TV station while it was live on the air in an unprecedented show of force.

Following the rampage, the 36-year-old leader decreed an “internal armed conflict”, enabling him to use emergency powers to deploy the army in pursuit of some 20 gangs now classified as “terrorists”.

The referendum seeks to extend those powers and put them on firmer legal ground.

But in recalling the law-and-order policies of El Salvador’s wildly popular President Nayib Bukele, a fellow millennial, they could also boost Mr Noboa politically as he prepares to run for re-election next year.

Mr Noboa, the scion of a wealthy banana exporting family, is serving the final 18 months of a presidential term left vacant when fellow conservative Guillermo Lasso resigned amid an investigation into alleged corruption by congress.

He was elected following a shortened but bloody campaign that saw one of his top rivals brazenly assassinated while campaigning.

By Press Association

Latest World News

See more Latest World News

The director of Germany’s Arolsen Archives, Floriane Azoulay, talks to the relatives

Jewellery seized from Polish inmates by Nazis returned to families

Democratic presidential nominee Vice President Kamala Harris, President Joe Biden and Michael Bloomberg, attend the 9/11 Memorial ceremony

US commemorates 9/11 attacks with victims in focus – and politics in view

Student Daniela Camberos shows a banner in front of the police

Mexican senate approves judicial overhaul after protesters storm chamber

The Eiffel Tower

Three terror plots targeting Olympics foiled by police, prosecutor says

A police officer stands guard as a health worker administers a polio vaccine to a child in a neighbourhood of Peshawar

Gunmen kill polio worker during vaccination campaign in Pakistan

Taylor Swift performs

Taylor Swift endorses Kamala Harris for president after debate

Palestinians look at the destruction after an Israeli air strike on a crowded tent camp housing Palestinians displaced by the war in Muwasi

Dozens of Palestinians killed in latest Israeli strikes

Video footage showed patrons of the La Guérite restaurant on Sainte-Marguerite island, off Cannes, cheerfully mixing two vintages of world-renowned Petrus in a bowl

Man behind 'Petrus punch' video that shocked wine lovers shares huge receipt for the wine

Passengers at Kenyan airport

Flights grounded at Kenya’s main airport as workers protest against Adani deal

People walk through floodwaters following a dam collapse in Maiduguri, Nigeria

Dam collapse in Nigeria sweeps deadly zoo reptiles into flooded communities

Vietnam Asia Storm

Flash flood sweeps away hamlet as Vietnam storm death toll rises

Raygun

Viral breakdancer Raygun named world number one despite zero points and widespread mockery at Olympics

Republican presidential nominee Donald Trump, left, and Democratic presidential nominee Vice President Kamala Harris during the debate

Harris makes forceful case against Trump on abortion, economy and democracy

Pope Francis waves to greet the volunteers on his arrival in Singapore

Pope lands in Singapore following visit to East Timor

Parts of the Carola Bridge over the Elbe is seen collapsed in Dresden

Probe after bridge collapses in eastern Germany

People watch a presidential debate between Republican presidential nominee former President Donald Trump and Democratic presidential nominee Vice President Kamala Harris at the Berkeley Art Museum and

Key moments from Harris-Trump debate