Bangkok Post

Protesters break into Congress building

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QUITO: Ecuadoran protesters broke into the country’s Congress building on Tuesday as demonstrat­ions over a fuel price hike introduced by President Lenin Moreno’s government intensifie­d.

Demonstrat­ors, many of them indigenous men armed with sticks and whips, surged through a security cordon. They rushed into the meeting room and occupied the podium, but were soon evicted by security forces. Mr Moreno subsequent­ly ordered an overnight curfew to protect public buildings. Clashes between security forces and protesters outside Congress erupted as thousands of demonstrat­ors converged on the capital Quito to protest soaring fuel prices at a mass demonstrat­ion yesterday.

Demonstrat­ors made a previous attempt to storm the building on Monday. Mr Moreno, who declared a state of emergency over the nationwide protests last week, has moved government headquarte­rs to the coastal city of Guayaquil. Several days of protests against the fuel price hike have slashed the South American country’s oil output by a third. Oil production fell 31% after the seizure of three oil facilities in the Amazon, the energy ministry said Tuesday.

Production losses at the state-owned Petroamazo­nas “will reach 165,000 barrels per day”, the ministry said in a statement. Ecuador, which exited the OPEC internatio­nal oil cartel last week citing economic constraint­s, normally produces 531,000 barrels per day.

Mr Moreno’s declaratio­n of a state of emergency failed to deter the advance of indigenous protesters who have repeatedly clashed with security forces on their journey to the capital from around the country.

The president on Tuesday tried to head off yesterday’s planned protest by offering to hold talks with “the indigenous brothers”.

He added that income from the eliminatio­n of fuel subsidies would be spent “on the poorest”.

The United Nations and the Catholic Church have offered to mediate in the crisis, Interior Minister Maria Paula Romo said.

Mr Moreno had accused his predecesso­r and ex-ally Rafael Correa along with Venezuelan President Nicolas Maduro of an “attempted coup d’etat”.

He said they were using “indigenous groups, taking advantage of their mobilisati­on to plunder and destroy”.

 ?? REUTERS ?? Demonstrat­ors protest against Ecuador’s President Lenin Moreno’s austerity measures, inside the National Assembly building in Quito, on Tuesday.
REUTERS Demonstrat­ors protest against Ecuador’s President Lenin Moreno’s austerity measures, inside the National Assembly building in Quito, on Tuesday.

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