Tag Archives: Ecuador

Ecuador President Daniel Noboa sworn in for second term, vows to fight drug trafficking, violent crime

QUITO – Ecuador’s President Daniel Noboa was officially sworn in on Saturday following his reelection for another four-year term early this year.

Noboa, 37, who wore a presidential sash over his chest, was sworn in alongside his Vice President María José Pinto, and their terms will run until May 2029.

The young president, who has become known for his fight against a surge of armed group violence in the South American country, pledged in his inauguration speech to continue to tackle corruption, drug trafficking and violent crime. He also swore to implement reforms and said he would lay “a solid foundation for job creation and investment” by working with Ecuador’s private sector.

“We are at the doorstep of four years of progress,” he said.

The ceremony in the capital, Quito, was attended by Health Secretary Robert Kennedy, Colombian President Gustavo Petro, Peruvian President Dina Boluarte, and many other international guests and delegates.

A U.S. intelligence assessment completed before the election concluded that a win for Noboa against challenger Luisa González would better serve U.S. interests over the next four years. The Trump administration has been mulling over establishing a permanent U.S. military presence in the South American country.

Noboa was first elected as president in November 2023 at age 35, with little political experience. He unexpectedly entered the race and was elected to complete the term of his predecessor, Guillermo Lasso, who had dissolved the Assembly and stepped down to avoid impeachment.

QUITO, ECUADOR – MAY 24: President of Ecuador Daniel Noboa and his wife, Lavinia Valbonesi leaves the National Assembly building after the presidential inauguration on May 24, 2025 in Quito, Ecuador. 

Agencia Press South / Getty Images


Noboa was re-elected on April 13 in a run-off against left-wing candidate Luisa González, who has made repeated allegations of electoral fraud. Her Citizen Revolution party, led by former president Rafael Correa, boycotted Saturday’s ceremony, even though González claims were rejected by Ecuador’s electoral authority and both national and international observers.

Violence and high unemployment levels remain the biggest challenges facing the president and his National Democratic Action party, which was also able to hold the majority in the country’s congress through a number of political alliances.

Maintaining that majority will be crucial for Noboa in pushing through his agenda, including a crime-fighting bill marked as “urgent” for its economic implications. The proposal has already drawn criticism from the opposition.

Juan Francisco Camino, a professor at the Equinoctial Technological University, said Noboa’s tight majority could easily shift the balance.

“Just one lost vote from his allies could paralyze his plans,” Camino said in an interview.

Asked whether Noboa might change his governing approach in this new term, Camino predicted continuity, especially with the government’s focus on using state power to fight crime, which he said “sells legitimacy.”

Ecuador is one of the most dangerous countries in the region, with around 8,000 violent deaths by the end of 2024 and crime continuing to rise in 2025. Last year, masked men broke onto the set of a public television channel in Ecuador, waving guns and explosives during a live broadcast and the president issued a decree declaring that the country had entered an “internal armed conflict.”

Camino stressed that Noboa must “look beyond security” and focus on rebuilding Ecuador’s social fabric, especially in areas like jobs, healthcare, and education.

Others said it was important to focus on root causes of violence, like lack of opportunities which often pushes young people to join criminal groups. Only 33% of Ecuadorians had full-time jobs as of late last year, with the rest working in the informal economy.

contributed to this report.

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Five fishermen who spent 55 days adrift at sea arrive in the Galapagos Islands after rescue

Five fishermen who spent 55 days adrift at sea arrived Saturday at a port in the Galapagos Islands after being rescued by a tuna boat, the Ecuadorian navy said on X.

The three Peruvians and two Colombians had been missing since mid-March and were found on May 7 by an Ecuadorian boat called Aldo.

Vladimir González, 32,  José Albines , 52, José Gabriel Albines, 31, and Jhonny García Jorge Ugarte, 40, arrived at the San Cristobal Navy Base in the morning and their conditions were stable, the navy said.

The fishermen had reported damage to the boat’s alternator two days after setting sail from Pucusana Bay, to the south of Peru’s capital Lima, the navy said in a separate post on Friday.

The navy said it is coordinating with local and foreign authorities to ensure their safe return to their respective countries.

The Ecuadorian Navy transported 5 fisherman lost at sea for 55 days to their base at the Galapagos Islands. 

Armada del Ecuador


Earlier this year, another Peruvian fisherman, 61-year-old Máximo Napa, spent 95 days at sea alone. He was also rescued by an Ecuadorian vessel and returned to Lima mid-March to be reunited with his family.

Napa told local media he survived the ordeal at sea by eating cockroaches, birds and turtles, according to Agence France-Presse.

Several dramatic rescues have been made at sea. In October, Russian Mikhail Pichugin was rescued after spending more than two months adrift in a small inflatable boat, drinking rainwater in the Sea of Okhotsk, off the coast of Russia. His brother and nephew died while at sea and he tied their bodies to the boat to prevent them from being washed away.

In 2023, Australian sailor Tim Shaddock survived more than two months lost at sea with his dog, Bella. The pair were sailing from Mexico to French Polynesia, the 51-year-old said, when rough seas damaged their boat and its electronics system, leaving them adrift and cut off from the world. 

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