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Showing posts with label Ecuador. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Ecuador. Show all posts

Saturday, August 2, 2025

Latin America Rising > Bukele could be President for Life in El Salvador; Guatemala updates money laundering laws; Ecuador's bill to regulate NGOs introduced

 

El Salvador abolishes presidential term limits,

extends term length

   
MP Claudia Ortiz, the lone elected representative of the Let's Go party in the 60-seat Salvadoran legislative assembly holds a placard Thursday protesting changes to the constitution that will allow the president to run an unlimited number of times. The sign reads "Only the People Can Save the People." Photo by Rodrigo Sura/EPA
MP Claudia Ortiz, the lone elected representative of the Let's Go party in the 60-seat Salvadoran legislative assembly holds a placard Thursday protesting changes to the constitution that will allow the president to run an unlimited number of times. The sign reads "Only the People Can Save the People." Photo by Rodrigo Sura/EPA

Aug. 1 (UPI) -- El Salvadoran lawmakers voted to abolish presidential term limits as part of constitutional reforms that could allow the country's populist president, Nayib Bukele, to remain in power indefinitely.

Under the reformed electoral system, the previous five-year term is increased to six years and a restriction limiting presidents to a single term is removed, allowing El Salvador's executive to run for office an unlimited number of times.

Members of Bukele's New Ideas Party in the Legislative Assembly voted through the reform on Thursday, 18 months after Bukele won a second term in a landslide victory, despite a constitutional prohibition on consecutive terms. The Supreme Court, packed with pro-Bukele justices, waived the ban on grounds that it infringed Bukele's human rights.

Opposition politicians and human rights organizations condemned the move, saying it removed one of the last remaining checks on power and brought the country a step closer to becoming a one-party state.

"Today, democracy has died in El Salvador," said opposition Republican National Alliance MP Marcela Villatoro.

Human Rights Watch said it was a power grab by Bukele aimed at ushering in a dictatorship.

"He's very clearly following the path of leaders who use their popularity to concentrate power to undermine the rule of law and eventually to establish a dictatorship," said HRW Americas deputy director Juan Pappier.

Cristosal, El Salvador's leading human rights organization, which fled the country for Guatemala two weeks ago citing threats and intimidation against its staff, criticized the lack of process and the way the change was rushed through.

"The day before vacation, without debate, without informing the public, in a single legislative vote, they changed the political system to allow the president to perpetuate himself in power indefinitely and we continue to follow the well-travelled path of autocrats," said Cristosal executive Noah Bullock.

Bukele's popularity mainly stems from a crime crackdown, targeting gangs in particular, that has seen El Salvador transformed from one of the most violent nations in the world to one of the safest in the region.

However, he is a divisive figure among Salvadorans.

His policies, including the use of emergency powers to detain as many as 75,000 people without due process, have drawn fire from human rights groups such as Amnesty International, which has said El Salvador was engaged in a "gradual replacement of gang violence with state violence."

The United States got pulled into questions around El Salvador after Maryland resident Kilmar Abrego Garcia, an undocumented Salvadoran migrant, was detained in one of Bukele's notorious 'mega prisons' after being wrongly deported to El Salvador in violation of a 2019 court order that said he could not be deported there.

He was among a group of 261 inmates imprisoned in one of the huge penal facilities after being deported by the Trump administration, who it said were either members of the Venezuelan Tren de Aragua gang or the Salvadoran-dominated MS-13.

Abrego Garcia, who was accused of being a member of the MS-13, was returned to the United States in June at the request of the Justice Department to face federal migrant smuggling charges in Tennessee.



Guatemala pushes money laundering bill to avoid international sanctions

By Macarena Hermosilla
   
Guatemalan President Bernardo Arevalo, who formally submitted the money-laundering bill to Congress on Tuesday, speaks a day earlier at a press conference in Guatemala City. Photo by Alex Cruz/EPA
Guatemalan President Bernardo Arevalo, who formally submitted the money-laundering bill to Congress on Tuesday, speaks a day earlier at a press conference in Guatemala City. Photo by Alex Cruz/EPA

July 31 (UPI) -- The Guatemalan government has introduced key legislation to modernize its money laundering laws and prevent the country from being added to the international financial system's "gray list" -- a designation that could raise borrowing costs and limit access to credit.

President Bernardo Arévalo formally submitted the bill to Congress on Tuesday, calling it a strategic tool to strike at the "heart" of organized crime and drug trafficking.  

During the launch of a program aimed at integrating Guatemalan companies into Walmart's supply chain in Central America, U.S. Ambassador Tobin Bradley stated that "the new anti-money laundering law is a platform for transparency and for attracting more investment to Guatemala."

The proposal updates laws from 2001 and 2005 that officials say are outdated and inadequate for confronting modern money laundering and illicit financing schemes.

It expands the range of entities required to implement controls, report suspicious transactions and appoint compliance officers. The bill also includes reforms to the Penal Code, Commercial Code, Law Against Organized Crime and private security regulations.

If the reform is not approved and implemented this year, Guatemala risks being placed on the "gray list" of the Financial Action Task Force, an intergovernmental organization created in 1989 by the G7.

The list includes jurisdictions with strategic deficiencies in their anti-money laundering and counter-terrorist financing systems. Countries on the list are under increased monitoring and must address shortcomings within set timeframes.

"Being added to this list would significantly restrict international transactions, raise the cost of external financing and, in turn, limit access to credit. It could also lead to local banks losing the ability to work with international banks, making it harder to carry out essential operations for the people of Guatemala -- such as remittances, international payments or letters of credit for exporters," Arévalo said.

The initiative's legislative prospects depend on the political support the government can secure among various blocs in Congress, where it holds a minority.

The executive branch said it has begun informal talks with congressional blocs and plans to make formal presentations to committees and party groups once Congress returns from recess.

Guatemala has faced warnings from Financial Action Task Force Latin America since 2022 for failing to pass key reforms. The Inter-American Development Bank, the International Monetary Fund and the World Bank have warned the country that without new legislation, a poor assessment will be inevitable at the next task force plenary meeting, which is likely in October.

The Arévalo administration views the reform as one of its most significant efforts to modernize the country's institutional framework.



Ecuador joins regional push to control

NGO funding

By Macarena Hermosilla
   
Ecuadorian President Daniel Noboa's proposal would create a mandatory registry for nonprofit entities, require regular financial reporting and allow the government to suspend or revoke operating permits if NGOs engage in “activities incompatible with the national interest.” Photo by MARXCINE/Pixabay
Ecuadorian President Daniel Noboa's proposal would create a mandatory registry for nonprofit entities, require regular financial reporting and allow the government to suspend or revoke operating permits if NGOs engage in “activities incompatible with the national interest.” Photo by MARXCINE/Pixabay

Aug. 1 (UPI) -- Ecuadorian President Daniel Noboa has introduced a bill in the National Assembly to regulate the funding and activities of non-governmental organizations, particularly those that receive money from abroad.

The proposal would create a mandatory registry for nonprofit entities, require regular financial reporting and allow the government to suspend or revoke operating permits if NGOs engage in "activities incompatible with the national interest."

If approved, Ecuador would join a regional push that has taken shape over the past year in countries such as Peru, El Salvador and Paraguay.

According to the Ecuadorian government, the bill aims to bring greater transparency to the operations of NGOs, many of which it says operate without clearly disclosing their funding sources, international ties or true objectives.

"I'm not attacking NGOs. Some of them do honorable work and help people in Ecuador. Those organizations won't have problems because they'll be able to explain where their money comes from," Noboa said.

Although the bill does not yet specify penalties, it would require organizations to disclose their donors, provide documentation for expenses and avoid political activities not explicitly authorized in their charters.

Civil society groups in Ecuador have voiced concern, warning the measure could open the door to arbitrary restrictions and potential censorship.

In March, Peru's Congress passed a law expanding the powers of the Peruvian Agency for International Cooperation to audit foreign-funded projects. The law allows fines of up to $500,000 and authorizes the suspension of organizations that use those funds to bring legal action against the state -- a common practice in human rights and Indigenous advocacy.

Despite opposition from more than 70 domestic NGOs and international groups, including the Inter-American Commission on Human Rights and Human Rights Watch, President Dina Boluarte's government defended the law as a way to "organize" international cooperation.

In El Salvador, the ruling-party-controlled legislature approved the Foreign Agents Law in May. The law imposes a 30% tax on foreign donations, requires registration in a special government registry and gives the executive branch authority to sanction or shut down organizations it accuses of meddling in domestic affairs.

Human rights groups have condemned the Salvadoran law, saying it restricts the work of humanitarian organizations and independent media.

In Paraguay, a regulation enacted in November 2024 requires all nonprofit organizations to register with the Ministry of Economy and Finance, file biannual reports on income and expenses and disclose any ties to international agencies.

The measure prohibits unregistered NGOs from signing agreements with the state and includes penalties ranging from suspension of activities to the permanent revocation of legal status.

Paraguayan and regional organizations have warned that the law criminalizes international cooperation and could seriously undermine human rights advocacy.

Critics say these measures echo laws previously adopted in Venezuela and Nicaragua, where "foreign agent" and "sovereignty defense" legislation has been used to shut down organizations that report human rights violations or criticize the government, under the pretext of foreign interference.

Governments backing these laws argue they aim to strengthen transparency, prevent illicit financing and block foreign influence.

But organizations including Amnesty International, the U.N. High Commissioner for Human Rights and the IACHR warn the measures are part of a broader pattern of shrinking democratic space in the region, where state control is prioritized over civic participation.

Wednesday, July 30, 2025

Is Rotterdam Europe's Narco Port? > Three large cocaine busts; Dutchman arrested in Germany with two suitcases full of drugs

 

At least 13 arrested in two cocaine busts at Rotterdam port


At least 13 suspects have been arrested for two separate cocaine transports through the Port of Rotterdam. A total of 600 kilos of cocaine came with the two shipments, the Public Prosecution Service (OM) has said.

The first shipment was discovered on July 2. Customs officers found 220 kilograms of cocaine in a container of bananas from Peru. After the drugs were intercepted, the container was transported to Belgium. On July 24, the shipment was then brought to a warehouse in Zeewolde. There, men from Diemen, Lelystad, Amsterdam, Zwolle, and Purmerend, aged between 26 and 63, were arrested. Two firearms were found in their vehicles, including an automatic weapon.

The next shipment was found on July 11. Customs officers discovered 380 kilos of cocaine in two containers of logs from Brazil. One of these containers was taken to Breda a week later.

During the unloading, men aged between 27 and 44 from Schiedam, Vlaardingen, and Dordrecht were arrested, as well as a suspect with no fixed address.

The OM also reported that this Tuesday, another 54 kilograms of cocaine were found hidden in the structure of a container from Ecuador. As far as is known, no arrests have been made in connection with that case. The container of bananas was en route to a company in Poland, but according to the prosecution, that company has no ties to the drug smuggling.





Dutchman caught with suitcases filled with ecstasy, ketamine on train to Berlin


The German police arrested a 42-year-old Dutchman on a train from Amsterdam to Berlin for drug trafficking. He had two suitcases filled with €440,000 worth of ecstasy pills and ketamine with him, the German customs reported on Tuesday.

The arrest happened on July 14. Customs officers checked the man at Bad Bentheim, the first German stop on the international train from Amsterdam to Berlin.

According to the German authorities, the man denied having drugs with him and said that the two suitcases had been given to him. He also claimed not to know the suitcases’ lock code, but opened them when pressed.

Once opened, the suitcases proved to be filled to the brim with drugs - 30 kilograms of ecstasy pills and 5 kilograms of ketamine. The drugs have an estimated street value of €440,000.

The German authorities seized the drugs and arrested the Dutchman. The investigation is ongoing.





Saturday, May 4, 2024

Corruption is Everywhere > As Ecuador continues to descend into a Narco State - One city's story

 

Danger at every corner: How Ecuadoran city of Guayaquil became unliveable


The Latin American nation of Ecuador has been experiencing an unprecedented security crisis for several months. In the port city of Guayaquil, now under the control of drug gangs, residents are living in fear.

In Ecuador's economic capital Guayaquil, everyday life was turned upside down in early 2024. On January 9, images of a group of armed youths taking journalists hostage during a live TV broadcast went viral. The same day, several parts of the city were attacked. Guayaquil’s gangs declared war on the institutions and state of Ecuador. The government of President Daniel Noboa, who was elected in 2023, immediately declared a situation of "internal armed conflict" and imposed a state of emergency. This gave the army special powers to intervene, particularly in prisons, which had become the headquarters of the gangs.

Since then, desperate families have had no news of detainees. In Guayaquil, the army has taken control of the prisons and banned visits, as it has in most detention centres. Worrying news is reaching relatives on the outskirts of prisons. Detainees are reportedly beaten and left without medical care.


Cocaine trafficking leads to surge in organised crime and violence

In the space of just a few years, organised crime has become all-powerful in Guayaquil. Wedged between Colombia and Peru, the world’s two main producers of cocaine, Ecuador is ideally located for exporting the drug. Guayaquil, the country's main port, has seen a rise in crime over the years. Numerous gangs share the spoils of organised crime, each specialising in a particular area: some gangs are contract killers, others are experts in extortion, while others carry out kidnappings.

For locals, Guayaquil has become unliveable. Kidnappings, extortions and crimes of all kinds can happen at any street corner. More and more people now live in gated communities. Others, if they can, choose to leave the country.



Monday, April 22, 2024

Corruption is Everywhere > Ecuador passes anti-crime referendum in bid to halt rapid descent into a Narco State; Too late for Colombia

 

Is this a real policy that will reverse the takeover of Ecuador by criminal gangs? Or, is it smoke and mirrors that will make the President look like he's doing something while those gangs allow him to live. My guess is the latter.


Ecuadorans vote in anti-crime referendum

amid spike in deadly violence


Ecuadorans were voting Sunday in a referendum on proposed tougher measures to fight gang-related crime.

Issued on: Modified: 3 min

A woman casts her vote during a referendum that asks voters to support mostly security-related questions to fight rising violence in Ecuador, in Nobol, Guayas province on April 21, 2024. © Santiago Arcos, Reuters

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The once-peaceful South American country has been grappling with a shocking rise in violence that has seen two mayors killed this week.

The terrorizing streak has been blamed on gangs with links to transnational cartels using its ports to ship drugs to the United States and Europe.

The results of the referendum "will define the course and the state policy that we will take in order to face the challenge of fighting against violence and organized crime," said President Daniel Noboa as voting began at the Electoral Council in Quito. 

Noboa declared in January a state of "internal armed conflict" with about 20 criminal groups blamed for a spasm of violence sparked by the jailbreak of a major drug lord, still on the run.

Gangsters kidnapped dozens of people, including police and prison guards, opened fire in a TV studio during a live broadcast, and threatened random executions in the days-long outburst that caused about 20 deaths.

Noboa imposed a state of emergency and deployed soldiers to retake control of the country's prisons, which had become the nerve center for gang operations and a bloody battleground that has claimed the lives of more than 460 inmates in three years -- many beheaded or burned alive.

Despite these efforts, the violence has persisted, which Noboa has taken as "a sign that narcoterrorism and its allies are looking for spaces to terrorize us."

Two mayors have been killed in the past week, making it five in a year and three in less than a month.

Since January last year, at least a dozen politicians have been killed in Ecuador, including presidential candidate Fernando Villavicencio, who was gunned down last August after a campaign event.

On Sunday, the president is seeking popular backing for his plans to clamp down even harder on those responsible for such acts.

Citizens are being asked to approve an expansion of military and police powers, significantly boosting gun controls and imposing harsher penalties for "terrorism" and drug trafficking.

Noboa is also proposing changing the constitution so that Ecuadorans wanted abroad for organized crime-related offenses can be extradited.

Nearly 13.6 million of the country's 17.7 million inhabitants are eligible to cast a "Yes" or "No" ballot over the ten hours of voting Sunday.

'Dirty campaign'? 

The majority of the referendum questions are related to crime prevention -- a priority even as Ecuador also grapples with widespread corruption, a crippling electricity shortage and a diplomatic spat with Mexico.

Last year, the country's murder rate rose to a record 43 per 100,000 inhabitants -- up from a mere six in 2018, according to official data.

In a publication Friday, polling firm Gallup said no other region in the world, excluding active war zones, felt less secure in 2023 to residents than Ecuador's Guayas province.

Other polls show a majority of Ecuadorans will likely vote for Noboa's reforms.

"People are endorsing the decisions... taken on the issue of security," political scientist Santiago Basabe of the Latin American Faculty of Social Sciences (Flacso) told AFP.

The vote is taking place in the same week that Ecuadorans faced power cuts of up to 13 hours as drought left key hydroelectric reservoirs nearly empty.

The government ordered workers to stay at home for two days in a bid to save scant energy resources.

Noboa has put some of the blame on "sabotage" without naming anyone in particular.

"They wanted to ruin us with sabotage... with a dirty campaign, and they have even tried with international pressure to sanction us as a country... because they are nervous," Noboa said ahead of Sunday's referendum, adding he was confident that "'Yes' will win."

Noboa, who took office last November at the age of 35, is also dealing with the backlash from Ecuador's raid on the Mexican embassy in Quito this month to arrest former vice president Jorge Glas, wanted on corruption charges.

Glas had been granted asylum by Mexico, and Ecuador's move has been widely condemned. Mexico has filed a lawsuit at the International Court of Justice in The Hague.

(FRANCE 24 with AFP)



Colombia has been a major centre for illegal drug production for many decades. Perhaps the first Narco State in South America. Politicians walk the fine line between appearing to fight the corruption while not being so effective as to get themselves murdered.


Hundreds of thousands of Colombians protest

President Petro's economic, social reforms


Hundreds of thousands of people took to the streets of Colombia's main cities on Sunday to protest against the left-wing government of Gustavo Petro, whose popularity is at an all-time low.


The demonstrations were not the first against Petro since he came to power 20 months ago, but they were easily the largest.

Shouts of "Petro out!" rang through the streets of cities across the country.

Medical associations, opposition groups, and even former allies of Petro had urged Colombians to show up in protest both against reforms Petro is trying to implement, including to nationalise health services, and against violence that continues to mar the troubled peace talks with armed guerrilla groups.

"I voted for change, for Petro, but we're still in the same situation. I'm demonstrating because I think Colombia still has hope and because I love my country," Martha Estrada, a 64-year-old pensioner wearing a tricolor hat in Bogota, told AFP.

Petro, commenting on X, formerly Twitter, said the protests were large in Medellin, Bogota and Bucaramanga but "weak" in 18 other cities.

"The main goal of the marches is to shout 'Petro Out' and to topple the government," Petro said, calling the protests a "soft coup" to thwart reforms. He called for a massive pro-government march on May 1.

In the capital, tens of thousands of demonstrators braved heavy rain to make their way to Bolivar Square, near the presidential palace.

Many waved Colombian flags, while white-shirted doctors and health workers carried banners protesting Petro's healthcare reforms, which have proved a lightning rod for criticism.

The president wants to reduce the role of private companies as health service providers.

"I am here as a citizen, a doctor and a Colombian," 35-year-old Julio Rivero told AFP in Bogota. "As a doctor, we see the deterioration, because there are no drugs to give our patients, and because patients face delays in getting treatment."

Experts agree that the healthcare system is in trouble and needs to be reformed, but some question how the government intends to do so.

Meantime, Petro's ambitious policy of "total peace" -- attempting to bring a final end to six decades of armed conflict -- has also faced reversals.

Concessions to armed groups have been controversial, with frequent violations reported.

Seventy percent of Colombians say the situation in the country "is getting worse," according to the Invamer polling group.

"This man protects the criminals of the guerrilla more than the good people of this country," said 67-year-old protester Betty Ospina.

Petro came to power in 2022 as the first leftist to govern a country traditionally run by conservative elites.

But he lost majorities in the legislature a few months after his inauguration, and his approval rating has plummeted.

(AFP)