Ecuador military vows to support president (Agencies) Updated: 2005-04-07 08:54
Ecuador's defense minister and the leaders of nation's armed forces on
Wednesday rejected a call from a key opposition figure to turn against President
Lucio Gutierrez.
Defense Minister Nelson Herrera was responding to Quito Mayor Paco Moncayo, a
former head of the army, who on Tuesday asked the military not to recognize
Gutierrez's government, which he called "corrupt and unconstitutional."
 Protesters clash with police during a march
near the Congress Building in Quito, Ecuador, Wednesday, April 6, 2005.
They are demanding the resignation of President Lucio Gutierrez.
[AP] | Herrera refused, saying at a news
conference Wednesday that the military would respect Ecuadorean law.
"We will not permit anarchy to overtake the nation," Herrera said. "The armed
forces back the rule of law because that is what the Constitution demands."
He was accompanied by the commanders of the army, navy and air force, as well
as the head of Ecuador's Joint Chiefs of Staff. None of the others commented.
Political tensions have been rising since the return Saturday of former
President Abdala Bucaram to Ecuador and a ruling by the Supreme Court clearing
him of corruption charges.
 Protesters march near the
Congress Building during a protest against the Government of President
Lucio Gutierrez in Quito, Ecuador,Wednesday, April 6, 2005.
[AP] | Bucaram was in office for six months before Congress removed him in February
1997 for "mental incapacity." Panama granted him political asylum soon after his
ouster.
Gutierrez's opponents charge he cut a deal with Bucaram to stack the Supreme
Court in his favor as payback for key votes Bucaram's political party provided
last year blocking an impeachment drive against Gutierrez in Congress.
Gutierrez was elected president in November 2002 after campaigning as a
populist, anti-corruption reformer. His left-leaning constituency soon fell
apart after he instituted austerity measures, including cutting subsidies on
food and cooking fuel, to satisfy lenders like the International Monetary Fund.
Gutierrez, a former army colonel, served as Bucaram's military attache and
was jailed for leading a rebellion in 2000 that toppled former President Jamil
Mahuad from power.
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