Cape Times

Demand for his extraditio­n a power play, says ex-leader

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LOUVAIN-LA-NEUVE, Belgium: Former president Rafael Correa yesterday called Ecuador’s demand for him to be jailed and extradited from Belgium just a power ploy by the government to stamp out opposition, adding that it will instead push him back to the forefront of politics.

In an interview with the Associated Press from his family home close to Brussels, Correa said he had no plans to report to Ecuadoran authoritie­s investigat­ing his possible links with a botched, brief 2012 kidnapping of a lawmaker.

Ecuador’s chief prosecutor this week demanded Correa’s arrest and extraditio­n, after the 55-year-old former leader failed to appear in court in Ecuador’s capital as required under the terms of the investigat­ion.

Correa said the case was politicall­y motivated to put him in jail or keep him from coming back. “I cannot go back to Ecuador in the next eight to 10 years, if the case continues to run its course,” he said.

He added that Ecuador was no longer a fully functionin­g democracy and insisted the government had full control over the judicial branch.

“There is no division of power. Everything is controlled by the government,” he said. “There is no independen­t justice in Ecuador anymore.”

Correa took Ecuador by storm in the 2006 presidenti­al election as the young, charismati­c leader vowed to help millions of impoverish­ed families.

Supporters credit him with providing political and economic stability after a tumultuous period in Ecuador’s history.

But the combative leader also feuded with the media, business community, indigenous groups and environmen­talists by pushing through measures that consolidat­ed executive power.

Correa’s hand-picked candidate, Lenin Moreno, won the 2017 presidenti­al election, but the two men have had a bitter falling out.

Since leaving power last year and moving to his wife’s native Belgium, his record has come under increasing scrutiny. –

 ??  ?? Former president of Ecuador, Rafael Correa.
Former president of Ecuador, Rafael Correa.

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