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Before Ecuadorian police broke into Mexican Embassy, governments were feuding over election, asylum

A spat between Ecuadorian President Daniel Noboa and Mexican President Andrés Manuel López Obrador spiraled into a full-blown diplomatic crisis when Ecuadorian police raided Mexico’s embassy Friday night in an extremely rare show of force that legal experts, presidents and diplomats have deemed a violation of long-established international accords.

With Noboa’s authorization, police broke into the embassy to arrest Ecuador’s former Vice President Jorge Glas, a convicted criminal and fugitive who had been living there since December. In the months before officers stormed the diplomatic facility, relations between the countries became strained and then reached breaking point.

Here’s what happened ahead of the raid:

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This is the best summary I could come up with:


Ecuador’s Attorney General Diana Salazar claimed that Glas was granted parole due to bribes that Ecuadorian drug trafficker Leandro Norero, known as “El Patrón,” had paid to judges and other officials across the judicial system.

The Ecuadorian government in a statement said it would “deplore” the possibility of Glas being granted asylum and that, should that occur, it would act “with absolute firmness based on the high interests of the State”.

Glas had been convicted in two separate bribery and corruption cases, one tied to the Brazilian construction company Odebrecht and the other stemming from a scheme that collected bribes for public procurement.

The Ecuadorian foreign ministry announced on the social media platform X that the government had requested “consent” from the Mexican Embassy “so that law enforcement agencies can comply with the order of the National Court of Justice” and arrest Glas.

Mexico’s foreign relations secretariat in a statement rejected the “increased presence of Ecuadorian police forces” outside its Quito embassy, characterizing it as “harassment” and “a flagrant violation of the Geneva Convention.” The Mexican government then granted Glas political asylum.

That night, López Obrador announced his government had severed diplomatic ties with Ecuador, while Mexico’s foreign relations secretary said it will challenge the raid at the World Court in The Hague.


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