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Youth violence national priority as Ecuador votes in presidential runoff

It wasn’t long ago that Ecuador was considered one of the safest countries in Latin America. Today it’s becoming one of the most dangerous, particularly for adolescents. Homicides of Ecuadorians between the ages of 15 and 19 years old went up by 500% over the past five years.

As voters head to the polls this weekend in the Andean nation to elect a new president, security is top of the agenda. Many see a country at a crossroads, with the next administration’s strategy on violence holding long-term implications.

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A security spiral can stun a nation. In Ecuador, where young people increasingly find themselves on both ends of violence, citizens look to politics, and community programs, to put a stop to it.

But Ecuadorians are looking beyond politics, too, to counter the root causes of violence. Mobilizing in the face of economic hardship and plummeting high school graduation rates, they are homing in on local initiatives to keep youth employed and off the street, adjusting their daily routines, and looking toward the international community for support.

“The state feels very far away for these youth,” says Andrés Williams, a professor who studies youth and violence at the Latin American Faculty of Social Sciences in Ecuador, “while drug traffickers seem very close.”

This time last year, 15-year-old Michael was riding bikes daily through the coastal city of Guayaquil where he’d grown up his whole life, hanging out with his friends after school, and “just being a kid.”

But then his school shuttered overnight last spring after a local gang, increasingly mixed up with international drug trafficking, threatened to kill the entire student body, angry that rivals might be sitting in homerooms. Today Michael finds himself adjusting to adolescence in a small fishing town five hours north, where his family fled in search of safety. 

“I feel better here,” Michael says of the dirt-road village made up of just several hundred residents, which has so far evaded the wave of bloodshed sweeping much of the coast. But, he says, he worries that violence might come here too.

Why We Wrote This

A story focused on

A security spiral can stun a nation. In Ecuador, where young people increasingly find themselves on both ends of violence, citizens look to politics, and community programs, to put a stop to it.

It wasn’t long ago that Ecuador was considered one of the safest countries in Latin America. Today, it’s becoming one of the most dangerous, particularly for adolescents. Homicides of Ecuadorians between the ages of 15 and 19 years old went up by 500% over the past five years.

As voters head to the polls this weekend in the Andean nation to elect a new president, security is top of the agenda. Many see a country at a crossroads, with the next administration’s strategy on violence holding long-term implications.

Karen Toro/Reuters

Ecuadorian presidential candidate Luisa González, wearing a bulletproof vest, speaks to the media after a televised debate with Ecuadorian presidential candidate Daniel Noboa in Quito ahead of an October runoff.

But Ecuadorians are looking beyond politics, too, to counter the root causes of violence. Mobilizing in the face of economic hardship and plummeting high school graduation rates, they are homing in on local initiatives to keep youth employed and off the street, adjusting their daily routines, and looking toward the international community for support.

“The state feels very far away for these youth,” says Andrés Williams, a professor who studies youth and violence at the Latin American Faculty of Social Sciences in Ecuador, “while drug traffickers seem very close.”

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