Ecuador to vote in November on whether to allow foreign military bases, says Electoral Council

Ecuador to vote in November on whether to allow foreign military bases, says Electoral Council
Members of the armed forces carry out an anti-drug operation in the Trinipuerto sector in Guayaquil, Ecuador, March, 16, 2025. (AFP)
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Updated 21 September 2025

Ecuador to vote in November on whether to allow foreign military bases, says Electoral Council

Ecuador to vote in November on whether to allow foreign military bases, says Electoral Council
  • The US has announced that it will maintain strong cooperation with the Ecuadorean government in its fight against criminal organizations
  • Ecuador hosted a US military base for a decade until 2009 in the coastal city of Manta of the Pacific Ocean

QUITO: On Sunday, Ecuador’s Electoral Council approved the holding of a referendum in November for citizens to decide whether to allow foreign military bases in the South American country, part of President Daniel Noboa’s plan to combat drug trafficking.
The referendum will be held November 16 and will include another initiative to eliminate a provision requiring a portion of state funds to be allocated to political parties.
“We approve the call, guidelines, operational plan, budget, risk and contingency matrix, and calendar for the 2025 Referendum,” Diana Atamaint, president of the National Electoral Council (CNE), posted on X.
Noboa has said that drug trafficking gangs operate through international networks, so it is necessary to act jointly with other countries to effectively combat them. The United States has announced that it will maintain strong cooperation with the Ecuadorean government in its fight against criminal organizations.
But Ecuador’s opposition groups say foreign military presence alone will not solve the country’s security problems and that the government needs a clear plan to combat crime.
The coastal city of Manta, on the Pacific Ocean, hosted the US military base for a decade until 2009. Since 2008, Ecuador’s Constitution has prohibited foreign military bases in the country, following a decision by leftist President Rafael Correa not to renew the permits.
Earlier this year, the former president said on his X account the move would be “an insult to our public forces and an assault to our sovereignty.”
“We do not need foreign soldiers. We need government,” he said.


Putin appoints deputy defense minister Bulyga to security council

Updated 1 sec ago

Putin appoints deputy defense minister Bulyga to security council

Putin appoints deputy defense minister Bulyga to security council
MOSCOW: President Vladimir Putin has appointed Andrei Bulyga, one of Russia’s deputy defense ministers since last year, as deputy secretary of the country’s powerful security council, according to a decree published on the Kremlin’s website on Saturday.
In a separate decree, Putin appointed Colonel-General Alexander Sanchik, who had been serving as commander of Russia’s southern military district, as a deputy defense minister, replacing Bulyga.
Bulyga, a lieutenant-general in the Russian army, had held the post of deputy minister in charge of logistical support since March 2024.
He took office on the eve of a series of swirling corruption cases that began in April 2024 and has seen more than a dozen people, including three former deputy defense ministers, arrested on charges including embezzlement and bribe-taking.
Long-serving defense minister Sergei Shoigu was appointed secretary of the security council in May 2024, amid the corruption scandals and criticism of his forces’ performance in Ukraine.