Bangkok Post

Crisis talks set to restart in Ecuador

Govt agrees to meet with protesters

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QUITO: The Ecuadoran government said late Wednesday it would restart talks with indigenous-led protesters, mediated by the Catholic Church, as a fresh state of emergency was issued more than two weeks into disruptive and often violent daily rallies against rising living costs.

To “return peace to the Ecuadoran people, we have decided to accept the mediation now offered by the Episcopal Conference of Ecuador (CEE),” government minister Francisco Jimenez said.

Without revealing when the talks might begin, Mr Jimenez said the CEE would arrange the details of the negotiatio­ns, “so that we can arrive at a final solution in this conflict”.

Discussion­s to end the protests that have rocked the South American country were suspended Tuesday — on what would have been their second day — after the government blamed the death of a soldier on demonstrat­ors.

And as protesters took to the streets again Wednesday, President Guillermo Lasso declared a state of emergency in four of the 24 provinces where the “most violence is concentrat­ed”. The state of emergency did not include the capital, where most of an estimated 14,000 protesters have congregate­d.

Chanting “We don’t want 10 cents, we want results,” a reference to fuel price concession­s offered by the government, several hundred people demonstrat­ed in the city centre, which was blocked off by police, metal fencing and razor wire.

Mr Lasso has imposed a month-long state of emergency on the provinces of Azuay, Imbabura, Sucumbios and Orellana, the general secretary of presidenti­al communicat­ion said.

The aim is to create a “security zone” — enforced by military and police and where demonstrat­ions are banned — around the country’s oil wells and to protect food, medicine and fuel supplies in those provinces as well as oxygen used in hospitals.

Mr Lasso on Saturday lifted a previous state of emergency in six other provinces — including Pichincha, where the capital lies — in one of several concession­s to protesters.

The government had called off talks after the military said Tuesday that a soldier died and five police and seven soldiers were injured in an attack by demonstrat­ors on a tanker truck escort in the country’s east.

Mr Lasso, hours before surviving an impeachmen­t vote, then accused Conaie leader Leonidas Iza of selfservin­g politics and vowed “we will not negotiate with those who hold Ecuador hostage”.

It was the powerful Confederat­ion of Indigenous Nationalit­ies of Ecuador (Conaie) — credited with unseating three presidents between 1997 and 2005 — that called the protests.

But government minister Mr Jimenez struck a different tone Wednesday evening in announcing a return to negotiatio­ns.

“The goal of the national government is firstly to guarantee peace to Ecuadorans, and in pursuit of that standard, we will not abandon efforts that allow us to arrive at that longawaite­d peace,” he said.

The protests, which began on June 13, have been costly, with losses of some US$50 million (1.7 billion baht) per day to the economy, according to the government, which has warned oil production — already halved — could come to a complete halt soon.

The nationwide show of discontent over deepening hardship comes in an economy dealt a serious blow by the coronaviru­s pandemic.

Indigenous people make up more than a million of the nation’s 17.7 million inhabitant­s.

The protesters want fuel price cuts, jobs, food price controls and more public spending on health care and education.

Over the weekend, Mr Lasso announced other concession­s in a bid to unlock talks, including a 10-cents-per-gallon cut in diesel and gasoline prices to $1.80 and $2.45, respective­ly. That received short shrift from protesters, who want a reduction to $1.50 for diesel and $2.10 for gasoline.

Five demonstrat­ors have died and hundreds on both sides have been wounded in clashes between the security forces and protesters blockading roads and disrupting supply lines.

Some 150 people have been arrested, according to observers.

 ?? AFP ?? Demonstrat­ors shout slogans in Ecuador’s capital of Quito on Wednesday to protest high living costs.
AFP Demonstrat­ors shout slogans in Ecuador’s capital of Quito on Wednesday to protest high living costs.

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