Ecuadoreans Back Rafael Correa’s Decision To Offer Julian Assange Asylum

Ecuadoreans back Rafael Correa’s decision to offer Julian Assange asylum (Guardian, August 16, 2012):

While Ecuador might be surprised by the UK’s reaction over the Ecuadorean embassy situation in London, it is one that is likely to be used politically by president Rafael Correa, who is likely to run for election again next February.

Earlier this year, Correa boycotted the Summit of the Americas, a meeting of heads of state from across the Americas, because of the refusal by the United States and Canada to allow a declaration of support for Argentina’s claim to the Falkland Islands. He called the United Kingdom a colonial power and also suggested imposing sanctions against the country for not wanting to negotiate with Argentina over the islands.

On Thursday, foreign affairs minister Ricardo Patiño said the UK’s reaction amounted to a strong threat: “It is basically saying, ‘We are going to beat you savagely if you don’t behave … but if you behave, we may not beat you savagely,” he said.

Patiño has been foreign affairs minister since 2010. He represents one of the hardliners within Correa’s government, who is pushing for a Venezuela-like line. Patiño was involved in a scandal at the beginning of Correa’s administration in 2007, and had to resign from his post as finance and economy minister at the time. Some videos showed him meeting investment bankers discussing how the bankers and Ecuador could profit from threatening to default on debt – a decision that Ecuador took in 2008.

Since Correa came to power, Ecuador has become an increasingly polarised country and this is reflected in the reaction to the decision.

For many supporters of Correa, granting Assange asylum was positive and gave the government strength vis-a-vis foreign governments.

“This is the decision of a country that does not ask for permission to the Brits to react, of a country that does not care about fear or intimidation that the foreigners are trying to impose on us about this decision,” Rosanna Alvarado, a congresswoman from Correa’s party, told state-run paper El Ciudadano.

Some hardliners protested outside the UK embassy in Quito on Wednesday night and many cheered outside the foreign affairs ministry when Patiño made the announcement.

Even people that are somewhat critical of Correa were in favour of Ecuador’s position.

“The United Kingdom and other developed countries don’t usually allow small countries like Ecuador to challenge their decisions,” said Marcelo Román from his home in northern Quito.

“Ecuador’s decision is a sovereign decision and foreign governments have to respect it.”

Román said that even if Correa uses the situation to garner more political support at home, it is important for Ecuador to assert itself internationally.

But others in the country are worried.

Business people are worried about the possible reaction that could come from the United States in light of a trade agreement that is up for renewal between the two countries.

Bernardo Acosta, professor of economics at Quito’s San Francisco University and former vice-president of the Ecuadorean Chamber of Industries, said this decision might affect Ecuador’s trade relations with both the European Union and the United States. Ecuador is currently negotiating a new agreement with the EU and a trade pact with the US is also up for review.

Ecuador’s main exports are oil, shrimp and bananas and the US and the EU are Ecuador’s main trade partners.

“This might be the last straw,” said Acosta.

“Ecuador is a small country with a small internal market and it needs a strong export policy. But such decisions can lead to more isolation and close off more markets,” he told the Guardian.

There are also worries within diplomatic corps. There has been a spat between Correa’s political appointees and career diplomats within the foreign affairs ministry. The latter feel that Patiño is pushing a political line without taking into account the rules of diplomacy.

In an editorial for El Comercio newspaper, former foreign affairs minister and former head of the UN High Commission for Human Rights, José Ayala Lasso, said there would be “political effects” if Ecuador were to grant Assange asylum.

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