The Japan Times - Ecuador faces election run-off after Noboa and Gonzalez neck-and-neck

EUR -
AED 3.783423
AFN 76.22581
ALL 98.988899
AMD 408.331204
ANG 1.858078
AOA 942.00582
ARS 1087.737087
AUD 1.643375
AWG 1.854133
AZN 1.748861
BAM 1.953674
BBD 2.081635
BDT 125.263689
BGN 1.954186
BHD 0.388218
BIF 3010.906532
BMD 1.030074
BND 1.395642
BOB 7.14922
BRL 5.962584
BSD 1.030978
BTN 90.134541
BWP 14.26961
BYN 3.374027
BYR 20189.451943
BZD 2.070907
CAD 1.476827
CDF 2956.312221
CHF 0.938799
CLF 0.02582
CLP 990.817726
CNY 7.524949
CNH 7.531927
COP 4260.38639
CRC 525.228449
CUC 1.030074
CUP 27.296963
CVE 110.604161
CZK 25.079368
DJF 183.064393
DKK 7.459142
DOP 64.071205
DZD 139.558528
EGP 51.802531
ERN 15.451111
ETB 129.840867
FJD 2.410734
FKP 0.848356
GBP 0.833685
GEL 2.868777
GGP 0.848356
GHS 15.970828
GIP 0.848356
GMD 73.650708
GNF 8916.320744
GTQ 7.965332
GYD 216.116921
HKD 8.023401
HNL 26.4007
HRK 7.601481
HTG 134.853253
HUF 404.849004
IDR 16834.809691
ILS 3.674378
IMP 0.848356
INR 90.106812
IQD 1349.397043
IRR 43353.246446
ISK 146.548503
JEP 0.848356
JMD 162.90273
JOD 0.730732
JPY 156.293494
KES 132.879731
KGS 90.07973
KHR 4135.747114
KMF 492.221125
KPW 927.066785
KRW 1496.955221
KWD 0.317953
KYD 0.859165
KZT 523.795264
LAK 22383.509289
LBP 93011.055998
LKR 305.997016
LRD 203.446461
LSL 18.994539
LTL 3.041541
LVL 0.623082
LYD 5.062846
MAD 10.347128
MDL 19.391898
MGA 4846.498736
MKD 61.493603
MMK 3345.640427
MNT 3500.19183
MOP 8.272778
MRU 41.315978
MUR 48.413692
MVR 15.86553
MWK 1788.208949
MXN 21.250464
MYR 4.604823
MZN 65.819543
NAD 18.994898
NGN 1546.872269
NIO 37.910457
NOK 11.56337
NPR 144.215266
NZD 1.829082
OMR 0.396579
PAB 1.030988
PEN 3.822589
PGK 4.14553
PHP 59.868906
PKR 287.416425
PLN 4.185149
PYG 8126.157158
QAR 3.750508
RON 4.976907
RSD 117.077737
RUB 99.530959
RWF 1439.013488
SAR 3.86353
SBD 8.707926
SCR 15.500362
SDG 619.074992
SEK 11.259296
SGD 1.396966
SHP 0.848356
SLE 23.434008
SLL 21600.138311
SOS 588.685055
SRD 36.221545
STD 21320.453718
SVC 9.021183
SYP 13393.023156
SZL 18.963512
THB 34.977709
TJS 11.252964
TMT 3.605259
TND 3.293117
TOP 2.412536
TRY 37.088858
TTD 7.000586
TWD 33.843904
TZS 2648.502753
UAH 42.900316
UGX 3788.876964
USD 1.030074
UYU 44.841204
UZS 13375.512312
VES 62.285742
VND 26163.881599
VUV 122.292463
WST 2.885059
XAF 655.250321
XAG 0.032113
XAU 0.000353
XCD 2.783827
XDR 0.789375
XOF 653.583954
XPF 119.331742
YER 256.43709
ZAR 19.009564
ZMK 9271.905712
ZMW 28.840895
ZWL 331.683433
  • RBGPF

    1.2100

    67.21

    +1.8%

  • BCC

    -0.0200

    123.26

    -0.02%

  • RYCEF

    0.1000

    7.55

    +1.32%

  • SCS

    0.3300

    11.69

    +2.82%

  • NGG

    -0.0500

    61.49

    -0.08%

  • RIO

    0.3000

    62.25

    +0.48%

  • JRI

    0.0300

    12.84

    +0.23%

  • CMSC

    0.0450

    23.415

    +0.19%

  • BCE

    0.3700

    22.51

    +1.64%

  • GSK

    0.4300

    36.47

    +1.18%

  • RELX

    0.5700

    50.56

    +1.13%

  • VOD

    0.0000

    8.57

    0%

  • CMSD

    0.0700

    23.82

    +0.29%

  • AZN

    0.6700

    72.66

    +0.92%

  • BP

    2.1500

    34.42

    +6.25%

  • BTI

    0.5400

    42.3

    +1.28%

Ecuador faces election run-off after Noboa and Gonzalez neck-and-neck
Ecuador faces election run-off after Noboa and Gonzalez neck-and-neck / Photo: ARMANDO PRADO - AFP

Ecuador faces election run-off after Noboa and Gonzalez neck-and-neck

Incumbent President Daniel Noboa on Monday clutched onto a razor-thin lead in violence-hit Ecuador's election, after a stronger-than-expected leftist challenger looked set to force a second-round run-off.

Text size:

With more than 90 percent of the ballots counted, Noboa had 44.3 percent and rival Luisa Gonzalez 43.8 percent, official results showed.

Gonzalez, a 47-year-old lawyer and single mother of two, told elated supporters in Quito that they had achieved a "great victory" by forcing what she called a "statistical tie".

"We have won," she said.

The telegenic lawmaker had trailed heavily in pre-election surveys.

Some exit polls had even predicted that Noboa would garner the 50 percent of votes needed to avoid a head-to-head contest in April.

But the election was seen by many as a referendum on the country's stalled economy and on Noboa's hardline security response in the face of record rates of murder, kidnapping and extortion.

In just a few years, cartels vying for control of Pacific ports and lucrative cocaine trading routes to Europe and Asia have transformed Ecuador from one of the safest countries in the world to one of the most dangerous.

During his 15 months in office Noboa has declared a state of emergency, deployed the army to the streets and gathered extraordinary executive powers to curb cartel violence.

He deployed heavily armed soldiers to polling stations across the country on election day, and the land borders with Colombia and Peru were closed.

Both Noboa and Gonzalez were shadowed at public events by a phalanx of special forces, hoping to avoid a repeat of the 2023 election, when a leading candidate was assassinated.

"We're only human. Of course, you feel afraid," candidate Gonzalez told AFP from her childhood home on the eve of the vote.

But this time round the only election-related incidents were about 20 people cited for breaking a strict three-day alcohol ban.

More than ten million votes have been counted so far, but it could be some hours before the full tally is known.

Still, Noboa's supporters were in a jubilant mood, lighting fireworks in Quito and Guayaquil, the country's two largest cities.

"We came to support the president, we want him to support us and change the country," said 52-year-old secretary Myriam Medrano on the streets of the capital.

Gonzalez's political mentor -- polarizing exiled ex-president Rafael Correa -- was also bullish about the prospects of victory.

"We are going to PASS Noboa," he said in a social media post.

- 'A bigger challenge' -

At 37, Noboa is one of the world's youngest leaders.

He has bet his political fortunes on a slick social media campaign that underscores his youth and vigor and a hardline approach to tackling crime.

On the eve of the vote he posted a video of himself in a crisp white T-shirt and sneakers, strumming an acoustic guitar and crooning along in English -- a striking contrast to his "mano dura," or iron fist, security policies.

Human rights groups believe the aggressive use of the armed forces has led to abuses, including the murder of four boys whose charred bodies were recently found near an army base.

"Ecuador is in a very difficult moment, I think in the worst crisis since we returned to democracy," said Leonardo Laso, a political analyst, referring to a period of deep crisis almost half a century ago.

- 'Dark outlook' -

The unrest has scared away tourists and investors alike, hitting an economy that likely entered a recession last year.

Noboa has been forced to turn to the International Monetary Fund to build a $4 billion fiscal war chest.

Easing fears that she may scrap that deal if elected, Gonzalez on Saturday told AFP that the IMF was "welcome" to help, so long as it does not insist on policies that hit working families.

Ecuador is also girding for the return of thousands of migrants who are expected to be deported by the administration of US President Donald Trump -- meaning a drop in remittances, which total about $6 billion a year.

Gonzalez told AFP she wanted "appropriate" relations with Trump, while claiming Ecuador under Noboa "did not defend its citizens" against US mistreatment.

"I will always demand respect for our citizens. They cannot deport our brothers as if they were criminals, with chains on their legs and arms," she said.

T.Ueda--JT