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Ecuador Declares Curfew in Coastal Provinces for Security Operations

QUITO, March 13 (Reuters) – Ecuador’s ⁠President ⁠Daniel Noboa on ⁠Friday decreed a nighttime curfew in ​four provinces of the Andean country, starting ‌March 15, intended to ‌facilitate military operations against criminal ⁠organizations ⁠with support from the United States.

The measure covers ​the coastal provinces of Guayas, El Oro, Santo Domingo, and Los Rios – the country’s ​main drug trafficking routes – and will run from ⁠11 ⁠p.m. to 5:00 a.m. local ⁠time.

Joint ​military operations between Ecuador and the U.S. started ​in early ⁠March. A recent mission near the Colombian border resulted in the destruction of a drug trafficking camp, according to ⁠the Ecuadorean Ministry of Defense.

The site was operated by ⁠a group known as the Border Commandos, comprised of FARC dissidents, and had the capacity to house 50 people, the ministry added.

Noboa has made military repression against organized crime a cornerstone of his administration. As part of ⁠his hardline stance he has criticized the government of neighboring Colombia for failing to combat drug trafficking, and implemented tariffs on ​Colombian imports.

(Reporting by Alexandra Valencia, ​Editing by Natalia Siniawski)

Copyright 2026 Thomson Reuters.

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