Published: 15:36, October 7, 2025
Ecuador extends state of emergency in four coastal provinces as violence surges
By Xinhua
An Indigenous woman traverses roadblocks placed by demonstrators protesting the elimination of the diesel subsidy by President Daniel Noboa's, government in Cayambe, Ecuador, Oct 5, 2025. (PHOTO / AP)

QUITO - Ecuadorian President Daniel Noboa has ordered the extension of the state of emergency in four coastal provinces and one canton for 30 days amid escalating violence linked to organized crime, the government announced Monday.

The extension, issued under Executive Decree 175, applies to the provinces of Guayas, El Oro, Los Rios and Manabi, as well as the canton of Echeandia in the central province of Bolivar.

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The emergency, initially declared for 60 days in August, was imposed in response to what authorities described as "serious internal unrest."

Under the decree, constitutional protections against home searches and the privacy of correspondence are suspended.

Ecuador has been grappling with a severe security crisis since President Noboa declared an "internal armed conflict" in January 2024. In September alone, the country's emergency service recorded 6,210 violent crime incidents, including robberies, extortion, and drug-related offenses.