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Keyword: correa

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  • Colombia: (FARC) Rebels helped Correa campaign

    03/07/2008 10:17:09 AM PST · by NormsRevenge · 14 replies · 91+ views
    AP on Yahoo ^ | 3/7/08 | Andrew O. Selsky - ap
    SANTO DOMINGO, Dominican Republic - Colombian President Alvaro Uribe said Friday that Colombian rebels helped Ecuadorean President Rafael Correa get elected, citing as evidence a rebel's letter seized during a cross-border raid that has sparked an international crisis. Correa walked out of the 20-nation Rio Group summit after the accusation, but an aide said he had merely gone to the bathroom. As other leaders complained, Uribe waited for Correa to return before continuing. Uribe said his forces seized a letter during their raid Saturday on a rebel camp just across the border with Ecuador in which Raul Reyes — the...
  • U.S. could intervene as Chavez prepares for war on Colombia

    03/03/2008 3:34:08 PM PST · by 2ndDivisionVet · 101 replies · 694+ views
    The Daily Mail ^ | March 2, 2008 | William Lowther
    Venezuela threatened to declare war on neighbouring Colombia last night, raising the prospect of the U.S. being drawn into conflict in South America. Venezuela's Left-wing president Hugo Chavez ordered ten tank battalions to the Colombian border and put war-planes under emergency stand-by. The tension follows Colombia's decision to send its army to strike against anti-government guerrillas hiding in the jungles of Ecuador. The surprise attack - launched without Ecuador's permission - killed Raul Reyes, a top commander in the Left-wing Colombian rebel group Farc, and about 16 of his men. President Chavez yesterday closed the Colombian embassy in Caracas, warning...
  • Under Siege In Ecuador (Chavez Wannabe in Ecuador)

    03/15/2007 9:28:15 AM PDT · by FriendlyFreeper · 8 replies · 361+ views
    FOX News ^ | 03/14/07 | Jonathan Hunt
    Here's the problem for the U.S.: At the center of the current crisis is a new leftist president who has already formed an alliance with the American-hating Venezuelan president Hugo Chavez, and is now threatening to kick all American military personnel out of Ecuador. And all this, just as Ecuador becomes increasingly critical in the U.S. war on drugs.
  • Quit Coddling Quito

    01/16/2007 6:12:54 PM PST · by Kitten Festival · 13 replies · 599+ views
    Investor's Business Daily ^ | 16 Jan 2007 | Editorial staff
    Latin America: The weekend inauguration of Rafael Correa as president of Ecuador was a spectacularly sorry show of anti-U.S. sentiment. Maybe it's time the U.S. just quit funding this ungrateful country. Correa did more than bring in his best pal Hugo Chavez of Venezuela as guest of honor at his extravaganza. Correa also went out of his way to dedicate the inauguration to ailing Cuban dictator Fidel Castro. "Down with imperialism," he shouted, using the regional code to accuse the U.S. Seldom has anti-Americanism been so in our faces. But to make sure the U.S. knew the inaugural wasn't just...
  • Ecuador Takes a Turn to the Left

    11/28/2006 8:07:59 PM PST · by Tailgunner Joe · 6 replies · 400+ views
    stratfor.com ^ | November 28, 2006
    Final poll results indicate that leftist candidate Rafael Correa won the presidency of Ecuador on Nov. 26, garnering approximately 65 percent over banana billionaire Alvaro Noboa's 35 percent. Though Correa's win is decisive, he will face a struggle to govern the politically tumultuous Ecuador. ... Correa is also an outspoken friend of Venezuelan President Hugo Chavez, having visited Chavez's house in Venezuela and bragged publicly of their friendship. Correa does maintain that he has not received under-the-table support from the Venezuelan president and that he will not tolerate Venezuelan intervention in Ecuadorian politics. Regardless of Correa's flimsy denials of Chavez's...
  • Ecuador Votes In New Turmoil

    11/27/2006 5:17:59 PM PST · by Kitten Festival · 9 replies · 488+ views
    INVESTOR'S BUSINESS DAILY ^ | 27 Nov 2006 | Editorial Staff
    Latin America: The election in Ecuador on Sunday showed a moderate platform attracts more votes than a far-left one. But if a winner has no intention of staying moderate, trouble is likely. That's why the election of leftist Rafael Correa, 43, is so likely to bring renewed turmoil to the Latin American nation when he takes office on Jan. 15. After his trouncing in the Oct. 15 first round by banana magnate Alvaro Noboa, Correa "washed face" (in the local parlance) and ran for president as a newly minted moderate. But Correa's first statements after declaring victory signal he hasn't...
  • Leftist economist wins Ecuador election (calls to cut ties to World Bank & IMF)

    11/27/2006 1:13:25 PM PST · by NormsRevenge · 19 replies · 680+ views
    AP on Yahoo ^ | 11/27/06 | Monte Hayes - ap
    QUITO, Ecuador - A leftist economist who called for Ecuador to cut ties with international lenders appeared to have easily won the presidency of this poor, politically unstable Andean nation, strengthening South America's tilt to the left. Partial returns from Sunday's voting showed that Rafael Correa — who has worried Washington with calls to limit foreign debt payments — would join left-leaning leaders in Bolivia, Brazil, Argentina, Chile and Venezuela, where he is friends with anti-U.S. President Hugo Chavez. The returns showed Correa with as many as twice the votes recorded as for his banana tycoon rival, who claimed the...
  • Noboa wins first round of Ecuadorean presidential elections

    10/15/2006 10:17:43 PM PDT · by ConservativeStatement · 7 replies · 406+ views
    Miami Herald ^ | October 15, 2006 | EMILY SCHMALL AND STEVEN DUDLEY
    QUITO, Ecuador - Ecuadorean presidential elections will go to a second round on Nov. 26, after one of the country's wealthiest men, Alvaro Noboa, narrowly defeated the U.S. trained economist Rafael Correa in the first round on Sunday. With a quarter of the votes counted, results from the National Electoral Tribunal showed Noboa obtained 26 percent, while Correa got 24 percent. Exit polls by independent pollsters coincided with these results. Neither candidate reached the 40 percent minimum needed to avoid a runoff. Ecuador was voting on Sunday for their eighth president in 10 years in what many hoped would be...