The Atlanta Journal-Constitution

Ecuador police raid of Mexico’s embassy stirs outrage

- By Megan Janetsky

MEXICO CITY — Diplomatic relations between Mexico and Ecuador dramatical­ly imploded after Ecuadorian police burst into Mexico’s embassy in Quito and arrested Jorge Glas, Ecuador’s former vice president.

Glas, arrested late Friday, had been convicted on charges of bribery and corruption and remains under investigat­ion for other potential crimes. Following the arrest, leaders from across the Americas voiced outrage at the incident and Mexico’s president announced he was breaking diplomatic ties with Ecuador.

But in a region that’s no stranger to political explosions, what has provoked such fierce outrage?

Why are many outraged?

Internatio­nal law experts and leaders across the region have said that the move violated long-establishe­d internatio­nal laws that few rulers have dared to breach. It’s almost an unpreceden­ted act. To date, there are only a tiny handful of cases of raids on embassies on the books.

By forcing their way into the Mexican embassy to make the arrest, Ecuadorian police effectivel­y intruded onto Mexican sovereign territory, said Natalia Saltalamac­chia, a professor on internatio­nal relations at the Autonomous Technologi­cal Institute of Mexico. Mexican President Andrés Manuel López Obrador called the break-in “a flagrant violation of internatio­nal law and the sovereignt­y of Mexico.”

The law Saltalamac­chia, López Obrador and other leaders are citing is an accord dating back to 1963 known as the Vienna Convention on Consular Relations. It sets out clear rules on “diplomatic immunity,” which effectivel­y blocks authoritie­s from entering embassies by force, among other things.

By injuring diplomatic personnel within the embassy, Saltalamac­chia said, Ecuador’s government violated another section of the accords.

“When a state like Ecuador makes a decision like that, you’re really endangerin­g all the embassies of all the states in the world” by ignoring precedent, Saltalamac­chia said. “You enter into a state of anarchy, a sort of jungle law.”

Why the rules are important

Such rules have been establishe­d to maintain healthy diplomatic relations around the world, and allow diplomats to carry out their work without fear of retributio­n. The U.S. State Department notes that diplomatic immunity exists to “ensure the efficient and effective performanc­e of their official missions on behalf of their government­s.”

The Friday night raid is a move even the region’s most-criticized government­s have hesitated to take, and something Ecuador’s own government once declared illegal.

Most notably — and rather ironically — the British government threatened to raid Ecuador’s embassy in 2012 to go after WikiLeaks leader Julian Assange, who was seeking asylum in Ecuador.

“We are deeply shocked by the British government’s threats against the sovereignt­y of the Ecuadorian embassy and their suggestion that they may forcibly enter the embassy,” said Ecuador’s government at the time. “This is a clear breach of internatio­nal law and the protocols set out in the Vienna Convention.”

British authoritie­s never made good on their threat, and only a few examples of actual violations have been documented in recent decades.

History of embassy raids

Saltalamac­chia cited the takeover of the American embassy in Iran in 1979, when diplomats were held hostage for 444 days.

In Cuba, in 1956 before the Vienna Convention was agreed, nine people were killed in Haiti’s embassy as a result of a raid by Cuban police under the Batista dictatorsh­ip.

In 1981, Cuba carried out a raid on Ecuador’s embassy to capture a number of officials seeking political refuge status.

The Organizati­on of American States on Saturday compared Friday’s break-in to a 2022 incident when Nicaraguan authoritie­s “illegitima­tely occupied” their own offices in Managua. The OAS called for a meeting to discuss the Ecuador incident.

While embassies have been attacked and raided in countries including Lebanon, Argentina, Libya, Indonesia and Thailand, those raids were carried out largely by insurgent groups.

Saltalamac­chia said by arresting Glas, Ecuador’s government may have also violated a regional agreement known as the 1954 Convention on Diplomatic Asylum, which allows individual­s to seek asylum in embassies.

However, some have defended Ecuador’s radical action.

Former Ecuadorian ambassador Jorge Icaza told The Associated Press that while he agreed that entering the embassy was illegal, he added it was improper to protect “a criminal who was sanctioned by the Ecuadorian justice (system) in two very evident cases, which is also negative from the point of view of internatio­nal standards.”

Ecuador’s presidency on Friday night also alleged that Mexico’s government had “abused immunities and privileges granted to the diplomatic mission” and granted “diplomatic asylum contrary to the convention­al legal framework.”

 ?? DAVID BUSTILLOS/AP ?? Ecuadorian police break into the Mexican embassy in Quito, Ecuador, on Friday to seize fugitive former Vice President Jorge Glas, who had been granted political asylum in the embassy.
DAVID BUSTILLOS/AP Ecuadorian police break into the Mexican embassy in Quito, Ecuador, on Friday to seize fugitive former Vice President Jorge Glas, who had been granted political asylum in the embassy.

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