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Middle East News Updated Jun 17, 2026

Ecuador Declares Emergency in 10 Provinces Amid Surge in Criminal Violence

Ecuadorian President Daniel Noboa has declared a 60-day state of emergency in 10 provinces and 3 municipalities due to serious internal unrest from rising criminal violence. The decree suspends protections against searches of homes and correspondence in coastal and other provinces. Security forces are authorized to conduct immediate searches for organized armed groups and criminal organizations. The measure aims to reduce public fear and disrupt criminal activities like killings, extortion, kidnappings, and drug trafficking.

Ecuador declares emergency in 10 provinces, 3 municipalities amid violence

Quito, June 17

Ecuadorian President Daniel Noboa declared a new 60-day state of emergency in 10 provinces and three municipalities, citing serious internal unrest caused by rising criminal violence, according to an executive decree.

The measure suspends protections against searches of homes and correspondence in the coastal provinces of Guayas, Manabi, Santa Elena, Los Rios, El Oro and Esmeraldas, Xinhua news agency reported.

It also applies to Pichincha, the north-central province that includes the capital, Quito; Santo Domingo de los Tsachilas; the northern Amazon province of Sucumbios; and the southern province of Azuay.

The municipalities of La Mana in Cotopaxi province, Las Naves in Bolivar province, and La Troncal in Canar province are also included in the decree.

Security forces are allowed to carry out immediate searches when there are indications that members of organised armed groups or criminal organizations are hiding inside a property, the decree said, as well as when the presence of weapons, ammunition, explosives or controlled substances is suspected.

The decree allows authorities to identify, analyse and gather information considered necessary to prevent or neutralise threats. It also authorises the temporary requisition of illicit goods and services deemed strictly necessary to maintain security operations.

According to the decree, Ecuador recently recorded a significant increase in violent incidents, armed attacks and criminal activity attributed to organised armed groups and criminal organizations.

The decree said killings, extortion, kidnappings, robberies and drug trafficking continued to fuel social unrest and disrupt normal economic activity. It said the intervention of the armed forces through exceptional measures was necessary to help reduce public fear.

— IANS

Reader Comments

James A

This is very alarming. Ecuador was once a peaceful country. The drug cartels are now causing chaos across Latin America. We need more international cooperation to tackle this, not just emergency decrees.

Priya S

Watching this from India, I feel for the people there. Violence and extortion are terrible. At least they're taking strong action. States like affected by naxalism show us that sometimes tough measures are needed, but long-term governance matters more. 🙏

Michael C

I'm worried these emergency powers are too broad. 'Suspending protections against searches of homes and correspondence' feels like a slippery slope. There must be better ways to fight crime without eroding civil liberties.

Vikram M

Good move by President Noboa. When crime reaches this level, you need strong deterrents. We saw similar crackdowns in Punjab during the 80s and 90s. It's not ideal but necessary for public safety. Hope Ecuador's people find peace soon.

Sarah B

It's heartbreaking that entire communities live in fear of kidnappings and extortion. But emergency measures should be temporary and followed by social programs. Without addressing root causes like poverty and unemployment, violence will return.

Ananya R

This feels like déjà vu from our own AFSPA debates in India. Security is important but so

We welcome thoughtful discussions from our readers. Please keep comments respectful and on-topic.

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