Six suspects in assassination of Ecuador candidate murdered in prison

Men believed to be involved in murder of Ecuador’s anti-corruption presidential candidate Fernando Villavicencio

Six men suspected of involvement in the murder in August of Ecuador’s anti-corruption presidential candidate Fernando Villavicencio were killed in prison on Friday, the prisons agency said, barely a week before a crucial run-off election.

The killings took place in a penitentiary in Guayaquil, the South American country's largest city, the attorney general's office announced earlier on Friday.

Ecuador's government swiftly condemned the killings.

Outgoing president Guillermo Lasso pledged “neither complicity nor cover-up” in getting to the bottom of the killings, in a post on social media platform X, formerly known as Twitter.

READ MORE

“Here the truth will be known,” he said.

The SNAI prisons agency said in a statement the six men were Colombian nationals. It gave no more details of the killings.

The government has said authorities are determined to identify those behind Mr Villavicencio’s murder.

Mr Villavicencio, a prominent journalist, was gunned down less than two weeks before a first-round general election as he left a campaign event in the capital, Quito.

Police arrested the six Colombians on the day of Villavicencio's assassination. A seventh suspect, also Colombian, was shot and killed by police, while other suspects were later arrested.

The second round run-off vote is scheduled for October 15th, the culmination of an election cycle marred by numerous incidents of violence.

Business heir Daniel Noboa, who holds a narrow lead in some polls before the run-off, said in a social media post that the government must provide details of what occurred at the prison and that peace must be restored in the country.

His main rival for the presidency is Luisa González, a protege of leftist former president Rafael Correa. She has said that surging crime is unprecedented and that voters should not allow “terror” to stop them from voting for change. – Reuters