Ecuador
breaks US trade pact to thwart 'blackmail' over Snowden asylum
Government
renounces Andean Trade Preference Act even as Snowden's prospects of
reaching Ecuador from Moscow dimmed
27
June, 2013
Ecuador
has ramped up its defiance of the US over Edward Snowden by waiving
preferential trade rights with Washington even as the whistleblower's
prospect of reaching Quito dimmed.
President
Rafael Correa's government said on Thursday it was renouncing the
Andean Trade Preference Act to thwart US "blackmail" of
Ecuador in the former NSA contractor's asylum request.
Officials,
speaking at an early morning press conference, also offered a $23m
donation for human rights training in the US, a brash riposte to
recent US criticism of Ecuador's own human rights record.
Betty
Tola, the minister of political coordination, said the asylum request
had not been processed because Snowden, who is believed to be at
Moscow airport, was neither in Ecuador nor at an Ecuadorean embassy
or consulate. "The petitioner is not in Ecuadorean territory as
the law requires."
Tola
also said Ecuador had not supplied any travel document or diplomatic
letter to Snowden, who is reportedly marooned in Moscow airport's
transit lounge because his US passport has been invalidated.
A
document leaked to Univision on Wednesday showed that someone at
Ecuador's consulate in London did issue a safe conduct pass for the
fugitive on June 22, as he prepared to leave Hong Kong. The name of
the consul general, Fidel Narvaez, was printed but not signed.
Tola
said it was unauthorised: "Any document of this type has no
validity and is the exclusive responsibility of the person who issued
it."
The
renunciation underlined divisions within Ecuador's government between
leftists who have embraced Snowden as an anti-imperialist symbol and
centrists who fear diplomatic and economic damage.
Some
in the government are believed to be annoyed that Julian Assange, the
WikiLeaks founder who has sheltered at Ecuador's London embassy to
avoid extradition, has seized the limelight in the Snowden saga.
Assange caught Quito by surprise last week when he announced Snowden
had been given a safe conduct pass. Quito replaced its ambassador to
London earlier this month in hope of better managing its famous
guest.
The
waiving of preferential trade rights followed threats from members of
the US congress to drop the ATPA in July, when it is due for renewal,
unless Ecuador toed the line on Snowden.
"Ecuador
does not accept pressure or threats from anyone, nor does it trade
with principles or submit them to mercantile interests, however
important those may be," said Fernando Alvarado, the
communications secretary.
"Ecuador
gives up, unilaterally and irrevocably, the said customs benefits."
The
announcement will enhance President Correa's reputation as a bold
leader unafraid to defy the US, just like the late Venezuelan
president, Hugo Chávez.
Tactical
calculation lay behind the decision. Even before the Snowden affair
Quito feared losing the trade preferences, largely because of
Republican antipathy to Ecuador's outspoken socialist leader.
"The
Ecuadorans got word that renewal of ATPDEA was a long shot in any
case, so instead of waiting for rejection, they took the initiative
and the high road," said Michael Shifter, of the Inter-American
Dialogue.
Correa
loved a fight and was responding to perceived US hypocrisy and
heavy-handedness, said Shifter. But the president had showed caution
in refraining, so far, from granting Snowden asylum. "He appears
to be weighing the political and public relations benefits against
the real consequences for Ecuador's economy, should he grant the
asylum request."
Juan
Carlos Calderon, the editorial of Vanguardia, a weekly which has had
its offices raided and staff threatened in disputes with the
president, said Correa's firebrand image masked shrewd, pragmatic
calculation.
Even
before the Snowden affair the president tried to soothe Ecuadoreans
that losing the trade preferences, which exclude thousands of
products such as roses, tuna and broccoli from export duty, would
have a small impact.
Not
all are convinced. "This will have serious consequence for
Ecuadorean producers," said Ramiro Crespo, director general of
Analytica Investments, a Quito-based consultancy.
"These
products which are exported to the United States have become major
industries in Ecuador. If commerce is restricted there's going to be
unemployment … This does not penalise the government, it penalises
the people."
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