Ecuadorian President Guillermo Lasso has requested support from the FBI, the well-known US police force, in the investigation into the death of the country’s presidential candidate, Fernando Villavicencio. The request was confirmed by the Executive leader himself, in a post on social networks.
“The US Federal Bureau of Investigation and Intelligence has accepted our request and in the next few hours a delegation will arrive in the country,” said Lasso in a post on the social network X, formerly known as Twitter.
I requested support from the FBI for the investigation of the asesinato of the presidential candidate Fernando Villavicencio Valencia. The Federal Agency for Investigation and Intelligence of the USA accepted our petition and in the next few hours a delegation will arrive in the country.
— Guillermo Lasso (@LassoGuillermo) August 10, 2023
The news of US police support quickly spread. One of the presidential candidates, Otto Sonnenholzner, praised the Ecuadorian government’s decision to accept help in investigating the crime. “This cooperation to find those responsible is good news. We need to find out what the real motives for the murder are, ”he said in an interview with the anchor of the CNN Isa Soares, this Thursday afternoon (10).
On Thursday, six people were arrested on suspicion of involvement in the candidate’s death. According to information from the Minister of the Interior, Juan Zapata, all of them are foreigners, but the detainees’ nationalities had not yet been announced.
“In several raids in the Conocoto sector and in the south of the city [de Quito]six individuals were detained: Andrés M., José N., Adey G., Camilo R., Jules C., Jhon R., all foreigners,” Zapata declared in the morning.
Threats
In an interview last week, Villavicencio had reported that he was being threatened by a cartel in the country.
“Three days ago, a militant from Manabí [cidade do Equador] received visits from several messengers from Alias Fito [líder do cartel Los Choneros] to tell him that if I kept mentioning Los Choneros, they would break me,” he said on the Vis a Vis program, hosted by journalist Janet Hinostroza, on Wednesday (2).
Video shows moment of attack that killed Villavicencio
Los Choneros are a criminal organization from Ecuador that emerged in Manabí and is formed by two gangs called Fatales and Las Águilas. They work with extortion, drug trafficking and homicides.
After the threat, Villavicencio said that he would not suspend his election campaign and that he would file a complaint against the threats.
He also previously held Los Choneros responsible for any possible attack that might occur against him, his family and team.
Villavicencio also said, in the interview, that he used the minimum of official state protection, but refused bulletproof vests.
Elections held
In a statement at dawn this Thursday (10), the president of Ecuador, Guillermo Lasso, decreed a state of exception in the country and stated that the presidential elections are held for August 20.
“That’s the best reason to go vote and defend democracy,” said Lasso, who called the attack on Villavicencio a “political crime that has a terrorist character” by someone who tried to “sabotage the electoral process.”
“All the authorities gathered here will remain together and we agreed that, given the loss of a democrat and a fighter, the elections will not be suspended; on the contrary, they need to be carried out and democracy needs to happen”, said the president.

The action moves the Armed Forces of Ecuador to the entire national territory for a period of 60 days. According to Lasso, the measure was taken for the “security of citizens, the tranquility of the country and the free and democratic elections of August 20”.
Who is Fernando Villavicencio?
Born on October 11, 1963, in Alausí, Fernando Alcibiades Villavicencio Valencia had an intense career as a journalist and trade unionist at the same time that he embraced a political career.
He studied journalism and communication at the Universidad Cooperativa de Colombia, where he graduated and began his work as a social communicator. Soon after, he started his political career as one of the founders of the Pachakutik Party in 1995.
President declares state of emergency in Ecuador after assassination
The following year, he began working at Petroecuador, the country’s state oil company. There, he worked in journalism and soon took up union positions. He remained a leader of the company’s workers until 1999, when he was dismissed by order of then President Jamil Mahuad.
Even away from Petroecuador, he continued to denounce the company’s problems, such as environmental and labor crimes. He gained notoriety as one of then-President Rafael Correa’s most outspoken critics.
In 2017, he ran for and was elected to a seat in the National Assembly. He held the position until May of this year, when President Guillermo Lasso signed the “cross death”, which resulted in the dissolution of the Ecuadorian parliament.
A critic of Correismo and the Lasso government, Villavicencio was one of the most visible characters in the allegations of corruption in the oil, energy, telecommunications and criminal structures sectors, according to his profile in the National Assembly of Ecuador.
(Reporting by Fábio Mendes, with information by Pedro Jordão, Mateus Cerqueira and CNN Español)
Source: CNN Brasil

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