Ecuador's reactionary war
By: Dawn Marie Paley
January 24, 2024
Civil rights annulled. Soldiers in the streets, curfews enforced. Armed men in masks patrol neighborhoods. Packets of marijuana and boxes of money laid out and photographed. US State Department officials in formal dress shake hands with their local counterparts.
Ecuador has recently begun to experience a pattern of violence similar to that of Colombia over the last 25 years and Mexico over the last 15.
Government officials claim that those responsible for the violence in Ecuador are men in criminal gangs, now considered terrorists, with nicknames like Cuyuyuyuy and El Ravioli. In this context, we are told, the military is acting to disrupt organized crime and protect citizens.
Some suggest that a crime bosss second escape from prison was the straw that broke the camels back and that it required an immediate military response. This recalls the so-called escapes of Joaquín El Chapo Guzmán. Journalist Anabel Hernández writes that the first time, Guzmán was wheeled out of the front door of the prison in a laundry cart with the cooperation of the guards. In the second instance, he is said to have escaped from a tunnel that the press has never actually seen.
Just as we question official discourse about austerity policies and economic measures that justify extractivism and benefit the one percent, it is important to question the official discourse on violence and, in particular, militarization.
More:
https://newpol.org/ecuadors-reactionary-war/