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Colombia Accuses Ecuador of “Deliberate Interference” in Presidential Election Amid Tariff Spat

BUENOS AIRES, May 30 (Reuters) – ⁠Colombia’s ⁠foreign ministry on Saturday ⁠accused Ecuador of “deliberate interference” in Colombia’s Sunday ​presidential election after Ecuador’s president agreed to lift tariffs ‌in a conversation with a ‌presidential candidate.Ecuadorean President Daniel Noboa on Friday ⁠said his ⁠country would remove bilateral tariffs on June 1 after ​reaching an agreement with right wing Colombian presidential candidate Abelardo De La Espriella.Noboa said on X the move would ​take place after  “confirming (De La Espreilla’s) willingness to promote a ⁠real and ⁠joint fight against ⁠narcoterrorism.” ​He also said that they had agreed on the handover of ​Ecuadorean criminals ⁠who are in Colombia.The Colombian foreign ministry rejects “the misleading presentation of the decision to remove the tariffs as a measure of good faith by the Ecuadorean government,” ⁠it said in its own statement, though it added it ⁠would remove measures adopted to mitigate Ecuador’s tariffs.Noboa’s office did not immediately respond to a request for comment.The two countries for months have been engaged in a trade dispute, with Ecuador levying tariffs because of Colombia’s failure to combat drug trafficking along their 586-kilometer (364-mile) border, an assertion Colombian ⁠President Gustavo Petro has rejected.De La Espriella, an independent candidate, will face Petro ally Ivan Cepeda and right wing Senator Paloma Valencia, among others, in ​the Sunday vote.

(Reporting by Leila Miller; additional ​reporting by Julia Symmes Cobb)

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