Mexico’s President Andrés Manuel López Obrador announced April 5 the suspension of diplomatic ties with Ecuador following the forcible entry of Ecuadorian police into the Mexican embassy in Quito and the subsequent arrest of the country’s former vice president Jorge Glas. These events occurred one day after the Ecuadorian government decided to expel the Mexican ambassador Raquel Serur in response to statements made by López Obrador.
Through his Twitter account, López Obrador strongly denounced the police intrusion into the embassy and the subsequent detention of Glas, who had been in the embassy since Dec. 17, having been granted political asylum by the Mexican government. López Obrador stated that the invasion of the embassy was “a flagrant violation of international law and the sovereignty of the State of Mexico.”
The National Court of Justice of Ecuador issued an arrest warrant for Glas, who served as vice president from 2013 to 2017 and had later been convicted of illicit association, bribery and embezzlement (delito de peculado). His lawyer, Eduardo Franco Loor, asserted that Glas has been subject to political persecution since his government lost power.
In an official statement released April 5, Ecuador’s Ministry of Foreign Affairs claimed that it provided Mexico with information regarding the conviction of Glas and the arrest warrant issued against him. The ministry claimed that diplomatic asylum for Glas was not authorized by the provisions of Article III of the 1954 Convention on Diplomatic Asylum or Article 1 of the 1933 Convention on Political Asylum. These articles stipulate that it is not lawful to grant asylum to persons who have been convicted or are being prosecuted for common crimes by competent ordinary courts.
Ecuador’s Minister of Foreign Affairs Gabriela Sommerfeld stated during an April 6 press conference that the decision was taken to forcibly enter the embassy because of the imminent risk of Glas fleeing the country.
Sommerfeld also described as “unfortunate” and “contrary to the principle of non-interference in the internal affairs of other states” the statements made April 3 by López Obrador, commenting on how the assassination of Ecuadorian presidential candidate Fernando Villavicencio affected the results of the country’s 2023 presidential election. López Obrador suggested that leftist candidate Luisa González, who was the front-runner for a time, was unfairly blamed by the media for the assassination of Villavicencio, and ultimately lost the election to now-incumbent president Daniel Noboa. As a result of these statements, the Ecuadorian government decided, invoking Article 9 of the Vienna Convention on Diplomatic Relations (1961), to declare the Mexican ambassador in Quito persona non grata.
The General Secretariat of the Organization of American States (OAS) issued a press release April 6, expressing its rejection of any action that endangers the inviolability of the premises of diplomatic missions. The General Secretariat called for dialogue between Ecuador and Mexico and convened a meeting of the Permanent Council of the OAS to address the issue.
The governments of several countries, including Argentina, Bolivia, Brazil, Chile, Colombia, Peru, Uruguay and Venezuela, also strongly condemned the forcible entry into the Mexican embassy.
From Jurist, April 6. Used with permission.
Photo: Embajada de México en Ecuador via WikimediaCommons
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