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Assassination days before presidential vote shakes Ecuador – and region

The assassination of a presidential candidate in Ecuador served as a warning to neighboring countries this month. For years, the small South American nation was seen as a bastion of calm in a region well known for organized crime and corruption. But the brazen murder of presidential hopeful Fernando Villavicencio cracked the facade of peace, exposing just how far-reaching organized crime has become in Latin America.

As Ecuadorians vote for their next president Aug. 20, their shaken views around security and safety following Mr. Villavicencio’s death could become the most important mandate for the nation’s next leader.

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Assassinations of politicians in Latin America may sound poignantly familiar after years of cartel violence. But in relatively peaceful Ecuador, presidential candidate Fernando Villavicencio’s murder has served as a wake-up call about organized crime’s reach.

In the days before his death, Mr. Villavicencio denounced the creeping power of transnational drug cartels in Ecuadorian politics. The anti-corruption candidate was shot multiple times as he climbed into a vehicle after a campaign rally in the capital, Quito, on Aug. 9.

Cartels have recently targeted politicians in Colombia, Venezuela, Paraguay, and Mexico. While Ecuador has not reached the levels of violence seen in Colombia in the 1980s and ’90s, it needs international support, and politicians need to start working together, says former Ecuadorian President Jamil Mahuad. “This is new for us; we need to develop new skills, which will take many years and much courage.”

For years, Ecuador has been labeled a bastion of peace in a region racked by violence and political unrest. But the recent assassination of anti-corruption presidential hopeful Fernando Villavicencio shattered that perception, highlighting how the small South American nation is facing down a rapidly expanding war on organized crime amid political divisions and limited economic resources.

As Ecuadorians vote for their next president Aug. 20, their shaken views around security and safety following Mr. Villavicencio’s murder could become the most important mandate for the nation’s next leader.

The 59-year-old journalist and political underdog running on an anti-corruption platform was shot multiple times as he climbed into a vehicle after a campaign rally in the capital, Quito, on Aug. 9. 

Why We Wrote This

A story focused on

Assassinations of politicians in Latin America may sound poignantly familiar after years of cartel violence. But in relatively peaceful Ecuador, presidential candidate Fernando Villavicencio’s murder has served as a wake-up call about organized crime’s reach.

In the days before his death, Mr. Villavicencio denounced the creeping power of transnational drug cartels in Ecuadorian politics, a problem the country had largely avoided even as neighbors Colombia and Peru became the world’s largest cocaine producers, and others in the region were largely defined by brutal violence. Singling out a cartel with ties to gangs in Mexico, Colombia, and Albania, Mr. Villavicencio promised to crack down on crime and corruption, which have driven a spike in killings here since 2020. His assassination has been a wake-up call not only for Ecuadorians, but the region as a whole.

“We used to be called an island of peace, but this is an event of such magnitude it’s like kicking the chessboard,” says former Ecuadorian President Jamil Mahuad of Mr. Villavicencio’s murder. “This is a war; we have to be prepared to go to war.”

API/AP

Presidential candidate Fernando Villavicencio spoke during a campaign event at a school minutes before he was shot to death in Quito, Ecuador, Aug. 9, 2023.

“New for us”

His slaying is one of three that have been politically related in the past month, including one Monday.

The violence in Ecuador, a nation the geographic size of Nevada where almost 7 million people live in poverty, is a warning to other Latin American countries, Mr. Mahuad says. “The world is a much more complex place now, this is a risk for the whole region.”

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