New York Daily News

Embassy raid slammed

Ecuador forces broke into Mexico mission to grab pol granted asylum

- BY MURI ASSUNÇÃO

Ecuador’s government is under fire over its decision to break into the Mexican Embassy in Quito to arrest its former vice president, Jorge Glas, late on Friday — just hours after Mexican authoritie­s granted him political asylum.

The ongoing crisis, which has already led to the suspension of diplomatic ties between Mexico and Nicaragua with Ecuador, began to unravel in the early hours of Saturday, following the raid of the embassy.

Glas, a controvers­ial politician convicted in 2017 for taking bribes from a Brazilian constructi­on company, had been sheltering at the embassy since December. He sought refuge there arguing he was being politicall­y persecuted, following fresh accusation­s of corruption against him.

Mexican authoritie­s granted Glas political asylum early Friday. Hours later, Ecuadoran special forces broke into the embassy and arrested him. They went into his room, “knocked him to the floor, kicked him in the head, in the spine, in the legs, the hands” and then “dragged him out,” when he could no longer walk, said his lawyer Sonia Vera.

The shocking, highly unusual move has outraged world leaders on both sides of the political spectrum — from Argentina and Uruguay on the right to Brazil and Spain on the left — as well as the head of the United Nations.

UN Secretary General Antonio Guterres is “alarmed at the forced entry of Ecuadoran security forces into the premises of the Mexican Embassy in Quito,” his spokesman Stephane Dujarric said Saturday in a statement.

Guterres noted that failing to protect embassies from host-country interferen­ce jeopardize­s “the pursuit of normal internatio­nal relations, which are critical for the advancemen­t of cooperatio­n between states.”

Under the Vienna treaties, embassies and diplomatic premises are considered foreign soil and inviolable.

Mexico’s President Andres Manuel Lopez Obrador said the move was a “flagrant violation of internatio­nal law and the sovereignt­y of Mexico.”

The country, which plans to challenge the raid at the World Court in The Hague, immediatel­y severed diplomatic ties with Ecuador.

Slamming the incident as “unusual and reprehensi­ble,” Nicaraguan President Daniel Ortega also cut ties with Quito, while Brazil’s Foreign Ministry expressed solidarity with Mexico and condemned the action as a “clear violation” of internatio­nal norms.

The sentiment was echoed by Spanish authoritie­s Sunday. “The entry by force into the Embassy of Mexico in Quito constitute­s a violation of the 1961 Vienna Convention on Diplomatic Relations,” Spain’s Foreign Ministry said in a statement.

Ecuadoran President Daniel Noboa has yet to comment on the decision, but on Saturday, the country’s foreign minister, Gabriela Sommerfeld, defended the move, saying Glas was at “imminent flight risk,” and adding Quito had already exhausted diplomacy talks with Mexico City.

 ?? AP ?? People protest outside Ecuadoran Embassy in Mexico City after Ecuador violated diplomatic convention­s by raiding the Mexican Embassy in Quito to arrest the former vice president of Ecuador. Several world leaders and the UN secretary general condemned the brazen move. Ecuador Foreign Minister Gabriela Sommerfeld (below) defended the raid.
AP People protest outside Ecuadoran Embassy in Mexico City after Ecuador violated diplomatic convention­s by raiding the Mexican Embassy in Quito to arrest the former vice president of Ecuador. Several world leaders and the UN secretary general condemned the brazen move. Ecuador Foreign Minister Gabriela Sommerfeld (below) defended the raid.
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