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- <text>
- <title>
- Ecuador
- </title>
- <article>
- <hdr>
- Human Rights Watch World Report 1992
- Americas Watch: Ecuador
- </hdr>
- <body>
- <p>Human Rights Developments
- </p>
- <p> Compared to many other Latin American countries, Ecuador is
- rarely the focus of scrutiny for its human rights practices.
- Rodrigo Borja Cevallos, who assumed the presidency in 1988, has
- expressed strong verbal support for human rights, and his
- government has granted domestic rights monitors significant
- access. Nonetheless, human rights abuses continue to be
- frequent, persistent and serious in this Andean nation.
- </p>
- <p> The most systematic problem is torture and other physical
- mistreatment of common criminal suspects by agents of the
- National Police Criminal Investigative Service (SIC). In
- September 1991, an international commission investigating the
- January 1988 disappearance of two young brothers reported that
- torture and physical mistreatment are a routine aspect of SIC
- operations. ("Informe Restrepo: Arrancados del Hogar,"
- supplement to Hoy (Quito), September 4, 1991, p.5.) This finding
- confirmed long-standing allegations by local human rights
- organizations.
- </p>
- <p> Until recently, the government had failed to explain the
- disappearance of the two brothers, Pedro Andrés and Carlos
- Santiago Restrepo Arismendi, ages fourteen and seventeen. They
- were last seen in public in Quito on January 8, 1988, when they
- left home in their parents' vehicle to see a friend off at the
- airport. Andrés Vallejo, former minister of government and
- police under President Borja, was censured in October 1990 by
- a majority of the National Congress for "having failed to act
- upon or take decisions that would have led to clarifying the
- arbitrary arrest, torture and disappearance of" the two minors.
- (Andean Newsletter, November 12, 1990.)
- </p>
- <p> After several failed attempts by Ecuadoran and international
- investigators to clarify the facts of the case, on July 13,
- 1990, President Borja created a Special (International)
- Investigative Commission, comprised of six individuals: Dr.
- Toine van Dongen, as representative of the United Nations; Dr.
- Gustavo Medina de López, attorney general of Ecuador; Dr.
- Apolinar Díaz Callejas, a former government official in Colombia
- and the founder of the Colombian Committee for the Defense of
- Human Rights; Dr. Juan de Dios Parra, secretary general of the
- Latin American Association of Human Rights; Dr. Isabel Robalino
- of the Ecuadoran Episcopal Conference; and Dr. Guillermo
- Arismendi Díaz, an uncle of the disappeared boys, representing
- the family.
- </p>
- <p> On September 2, 1991, the commission released its
- conclusions: the Restrepo brothers disappeared at the hands of
- members of the National Police; the police were negligent in
- their efforts to investigate the case and some officers were
- involved in a cover-up; and although the bodies of the boys have
- not been found, they are dead. Central to the commission's
- findings was the testimony of former SIC agent Hugo Efraín
- España Torres, who revealed that the boys were tortured by SIC
- officials and that he collaborated in dumping their bodies in
- Lake Yambo, near Quito, during the night of January 11-12, 1988.
- </p>
- <p> España has reportedly been in provisional detention since
- September 4, 1991. Also detained in connection with the case
- are: Guillermo Llerena, a former SIC agent; General Gilberto
- Molina, who retired from his post as general commander of the
- National Police on August 16, 1991; and Colonels Trajano
- Barrionuevo and Gustavo Gallegos, Captain Marcelo Valenzuela and
- Sub-Lieutenant Doris Morán, all of the police. In October 1991,
- Dr. Walter Guerrero, president of the Supreme Court, ruled that
- the case should be tried in civilian court. Human rights
- monitors in Ecuador believe that General Molina is likely to
- exercise his right under the Ecuadoran Constitution to be tried
- in a police court.
- </p>
- <p> The Restrepo case is of historic significance in Ecuador. In
- addition to determining that SIC officials were responsible for
- the death of the two boys, the commission found that torture,
- arbitrary detention, and cruel, inhuman and degrading treatment
- are systematic SIC practices. ("Informe Restrepo: Arrancados
- del Hogar," p.5.) On the same day that the commission released
- its findings, President Borja abolished the SIC. Never before
- has the Ecuadoran government even implicitly acknowledged the
- institutionalized nature of human rights abuses committed by
- SIC agents or taken such a dramatic measure to curb abuses. Nor
- have so many officials or officials of such a high level been
- detained in Ecuador in connection with a human rights case. The
- case has lent unprecedented recognition and legitimacy to the
- cause of human rights in Ecuador. The resulting pressure of
- public opinion makes it likely that the case will be prosecuted
- vigorously.
- </p>
- <p> The armed forces also violate fundamental rights in Ecuador,
- though less frequently than the police. They have been
- implicated in cases of torture, homicide, illegal detention and
- physical mistreatment of common criminals and indigenous
- activists.
- </p>
- <p> Rural violence also remains a serious problem in Ecuador.
- Rural land conflicts occur in large numbers in the eastern
- coastal and central mountain regions, and are the predominant
- context within which rural violence occurs. Although Americas
- Watch takes no position on who has the right to land ownership
- in these disputes, we are profoundly concerned about the
- violent consequences of these conflicts, the consistent failure
- of the state to punish those responsible for acts of violence,
- and the repression directed at the Ecuadoran indigenous
- movement.
- </p>
- <p> In June 1990, the indigenous population in the Sierra
- participated in a three-day massive protest over land and other
- socioeconomic and cultural issues. A few months later, several
- landowners in the Sierra hired groups of armed men from the
- coastal province of Esmeraldas, ostensibly to serve as
- "security guards" for their rural property. Many of these men
- are former members of the armed forces; they dress in military
- uniforms and reportedly carry firearms issued only to the armed
- forces. (Eduardo Tamayo, "Chronicle of a Reported Death," Punto
- de Vista, as reported in Foreign Broadcast Information Service,
- May 31, 1991, page 35.)
- </p>
- <p> Abuses related to land conflicts are frequently committed
- during evictions by landowners and their "security guards,"
- often in the presence of National Police officials. Beatings of
- indigenous community leaders and members are common, as are the
- burning of their homes and the destruction and theft of their
- property. From time to time, police and military officials play
- a direct role in evictions. "Guards" have also entered
- indigenous communities adjacent to the property they are
- protecting and subjected inhabitants to threats, theft, violence
- and destruction.
- </p>
- <p> Two indigenous activists were killed in 1991. Julio
- Cabascango, human rights officer of the Indigenous and Peasant
- Federation of Imbabura (FICI), was knifed to death in the
- community of Huaycopungo, province of Imbabura, on March 31.
- Members of the community allege that the assailant was a hired
- guard from the neighboring hacienda. According to the
- Confederation of Indigenous Nationalities of Ecuador, Virgilio
- Ganzino was shot to death on September 21 by landowner
- Washington Albán. The killing took place in the community of
- Churo Lozán, the province of Cotopaxi, while Ganzino was on his
- way to a meeting about a local bilingual education program.
- </p>
- <p> Minister of Government and Police César Verduga told
- Americas Watch in a July 14 interview that the armed guards fill
- a gap in a country which has 15,000 police officials but
- requires 45,000. Verduga indicated that at no time has the
- government contemplated the dismantling of such groups. On the
- contrary, he intends to "control their existence" with
- government regulations requiring them to function as employees
- of a legally constituted security company, to submit curricula
- vitae to the government, and to use specified firearms and
- uniforms.
- </p>
- <p> What is missing, in our view, is a commitment by the
- government to end the impunity exercised by some landowners and
- their guards for violent abuses against peasants. Americas
- Watch is concerned that the government is tolerating, rather
- than punishing, the abuses committed by landowners and their
- hired guards. We are aware of no cases in which landowners or
- their guards have been convicted for the violence regularly
- committed against peasants or indigenous activists.
- </p>
- <p> Repression against the indigenous population has also taken
- the form of illegal detention (without warrant and not during
- the commission of a crime) and arrest based on false charges
- levied by landowners against community members and leaders. This
- problem reflects the level of influence landowners enjoy at a
- local level over the police and judiciary. Indigenous detainees
- have on several occasions been subject to torture or other
- physical mistreatment.
- </p>
- <p>The Right to Monitor
- </p>
- <p> The government does not significantly impede the right to
- monitor human rights in Ecuador, and government officials
- display a cordial and open attitude toward prominent human
- rights activists. Since 1988, a nationwide network of human
- rights organizations has begun to take root. Investigations by
- international human rights organizations are allowed, and in
- July 1991, Americas Watch enjoyed access to high-level
- government officials during the course of an investigation.
- </p>
- <p>U.S. Policy
- </p>
- <p> The United States and Ecuador collaborate on a number of
- anti-narcotics measures. In fiscal year 1991, the State
- Department's Bureau of International Narcotics Matters (INM)
- provided $1.5 million for anti-narcotics equipment and training
- by U.S. personnel for the Ecuadoran Army, National Police and
- Military Customs Police. According to an INM trainer interviewed
- by Americas Watch, training in Ecuador is related strictly to
- law enforcement techniques and does not address human rights.
- </p>
- <p> According to the Pentagon, Ecuador received $800,000 in
- International Military Education and Training funds in fiscal
- year 1991. In addition, Ecuador received approximately $14
- million in development assistance from the U.S. Agency for
- International Development. Unlike past years, Ecuador did not
- receive Economic Support Funds in 1991. Several U.S. officials
- attributed this change to Ecuador's low priority for the United
- States and limitations in State Department resources.
- </p>
- <p> Ecuador enjoys a favorable trade relationship with the
- United States. In the first six months of 1991, ninety-four
- percent of Ecuador's imports to the United States were eligible
- for reduced tariffs under the Generalized System of Preferences,
- up from eighty-six percent in 1990. Ecuador is also in line to
- receive trade benefits under the Andean Trade Preference Act if
- the legislation is passed by the U.S. Congress.
- </p>
- <p> Despite these economic and military links to Ecuador, the
- Bush Administration was conspicuously silent on human rights
- abuses in Ecuador in 1991. State Department officials claimed
- that human rights concerns are raised as part of the regular
- dialogue with Ecuadoran officials, but declined to provide a
- single example of when that had occurred.
- </p>
- <p> The Ecumenical Commission for the Defense of Human Rights,
- in Quito, reported that although they are contacted each year
- by the U.S. Embassy's human rights officer, the bulk of the
- information they provide is excluded from the chapter on Ecuador
- in the State Department's annual Country Reports on Human Rights
- Practices. While the report on 1990, published in February 1991,
- made reference to pervasive discrimination against the
- indigenous population, it gave almost no information about rural
- violence or repression of the indigenous movement. Furthermore,
- while the report made blanket statements about the persistence
- of arbitrary detention, torture and other mistreatment of common
- criminals, the statements were bland and excluded cases that
- would have effectively illustrated the gravity of the abuses.
- </p>
- <p>The Work of Americas Watch
- </p>
- <p> In July, Americas Watch sent a researcher to Ecuador to
- assess the overall human rights situation and to investigate
- rural violence related to land conflicts and the indigenous
- population. The representative interviewed leaders of
- indigenous organizations, victims of abuses and local human
- rights monitors, and met with government officials, members of
- the Ecuadoran Congress and representatives of the U.S. Embassy.
- She also visited several indigenous communities where violent
- evictions had taken place.
- </p>
- </body>
- </article>
- </text>
-