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Ecuador's 5,000-Troop Push Meets Indigenous Blockades After Subsidy Shock
(MENAFN- The Rio Times) Ecuador has rushed 5,000 additional troops and police to Otavalo to break roadblocks and reopen the Pan-American highway after a night and day of clashes that turned the Indigenous stronghold into the center of a national crisis.
Authorities reported dozens of arrests and several injured officers; Indigenous leaders said more than 50 demonstrators were hurt, some seriously.
The immediate spark was a government push to drive a“humanitarian convoy” through the E35 artery. The Ecuadorian Red Cross refused to accompany it, saying humanitarian work must remain neutral and independent-deepening mistrust on the ground.
Behind the confrontation is a sharp policy turn. On September 13 the government ended the diesel subsidy, lifting pump prices from $1.80 to $2.80 per gallon.
Officials say the move will save about $1.1 billion a year, curb smuggling, and be cushioned with compensation for transport sectors and a phased price-band system.
For families and small businesses, though, diesel is the cost of moving food, people, and goods; the jump feeds directly into household budgets and street prices.
That pocketbook pain, plus anger over mining and oil concessions and a wider sense of insecurity, has broadened the protests beyond a single price dispute.
Ecuador unrest tests fuel subsidy plan
The setting matters. Otavalo sits on a strategic stretch of the Pan-American and is a symbolic bastion of Indigenous organization.
When troops and police try to clear roads there, it becomes a national stage. Local reporters have documented tear gas, burning barricades, and scuffles with the press; watchdogs count multiple attacks on journalists.
Courts have also pushed back: after stones struck the president's convoy in Cañar, a judge freed several detainees, calling their arrests unlawful. A state of exception remains in force in parts of the country as Church leaders and local officials try to organize talks.
Why this matters beyond Ecuador : it is a test of whether a government can unwind costly fuel subsidies without igniting social conflict, and whether neutral aid can operate when police and military lead convoys.
With large deployments, contested arrests, and hardening positions, the risk of escalation-and broader economic disruption-remains real.
Authorities reported dozens of arrests and several injured officers; Indigenous leaders said more than 50 demonstrators were hurt, some seriously.
The immediate spark was a government push to drive a“humanitarian convoy” through the E35 artery. The Ecuadorian Red Cross refused to accompany it, saying humanitarian work must remain neutral and independent-deepening mistrust on the ground.
Behind the confrontation is a sharp policy turn. On September 13 the government ended the diesel subsidy, lifting pump prices from $1.80 to $2.80 per gallon.
Officials say the move will save about $1.1 billion a year, curb smuggling, and be cushioned with compensation for transport sectors and a phased price-band system.
For families and small businesses, though, diesel is the cost of moving food, people, and goods; the jump feeds directly into household budgets and street prices.
That pocketbook pain, plus anger over mining and oil concessions and a wider sense of insecurity, has broadened the protests beyond a single price dispute.
Ecuador unrest tests fuel subsidy plan
The setting matters. Otavalo sits on a strategic stretch of the Pan-American and is a symbolic bastion of Indigenous organization.
When troops and police try to clear roads there, it becomes a national stage. Local reporters have documented tear gas, burning barricades, and scuffles with the press; watchdogs count multiple attacks on journalists.
Courts have also pushed back: after stones struck the president's convoy in Cañar, a judge freed several detainees, calling their arrests unlawful. A state of exception remains in force in parts of the country as Church leaders and local officials try to organize talks.
Why this matters beyond Ecuador : it is a test of whether a government can unwind costly fuel subsidies without igniting social conflict, and whether neutral aid can operate when police and military lead convoys.
With large deployments, contested arrests, and hardening positions, the risk of escalation-and broader economic disruption-remains real.

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