The country’s main newspaper, El Universo, reported Villavicencio was assassinated “hitman-style and with three shots to the head.”

Police said the suspects were arrested in a series of raids in which they also found a rifle, a machine gun, grenades and ammunition.

Presidential candidate in Ecuador assassinated at campaign event

In a message of support to Ecuador, Venezuela’s President Nicolas Maduro drew a direct link to the murder of Haitian president Jovenel Moise in his home in July 2021 by a group of 17 Colombian mercenaries.

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“A gang of Colombian hitmen, mercenaries, went to Haiti to assassinate a president,” he said during an official event.

“These criminal gangs of hitmen are unfortunately taking this Colombian model of political assassinations outside its borders.”

Jorge Mantilla, a Colombian investigator into organised crime, said that the arrests showed the “specialisation among Colombian criminals in the use of violence” after six decades of armed conflict between the state and guerillas, paramilitaries and drug gangs.

He said the two assassinations “show the capacity that these violence professionals have of connecting with transnational crime networks.”

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Villavicencio said last week he had received several threats from Los Choneros, one of Ecuador’s most powerful criminal groups which the Insight Crime think tank said became the armed wing of a Colombian drug cartel. It also has ties to Mexico’s Sinaloa cartel.

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Police stop slaughter in Ecuador prison after rioting and gang massacre kills at least 118 inmates

Police stop slaughter in Ecuador prison after rioting and gang massacre kills at least 118 inmates

Late Friday Villavicencio was buried in Quito during a private ceremony after hundreds of people paid tribute at an exhibition centre, where his coffin was draped with the flag and a symbolic presidential sash with the words “My power is in the constitution.”

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While there has been no clear claim of responsibility, the murder has highlighted the once-peaceful nation’s decline into a violent hotbed of drug trafficking and organised crime.

Wedged between the major cocaine producers Colombia and Peru, Ecuador – seen as having laxer controls – has in recent years attracted foreign drug cartels that have linked up with local gangs to move drugs through the country to the United States and Europe.

Mantilla explains that Ecuador’s drug gangs “acquired their power from working with Colombian organisations and later became independent” and grew stronger.

Presidential candidate Fernando Villavicencio speaks during a campaign event at a school minutes before he was shot to death in Quito on August 9. Photo: API via AP

On Thursday, Ecuador’s Interior Minister Juan Zapata referred to the detainees simply as “foreigners,” saying they were “members of a criminal group” that assassinated Villavicencio in an “attempt to sabotage” snap presidential elections due on August 20.

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Colombian media said the suspects had criminal records in their home country, including for arms manufacturing and trafficking, drug trafficking, murder, or domestic violence.

After the Haiti assassination, a US investigation revealed that two men at the head of a Miami security firm had devised a plan to kidnap Moise and replace him with a Haitian-American citizen.

Colombian drug lord compared to Pablo Escobar sentenced to 45 years in US prison

In March this year, dual Haitian-Chilean citizen Rodolphe Jaar pled guilty in the US to housing the Colombian commando team and giving them weapons.

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That same month Colombia’s president Petro said his country was partly responsible for Moise’s assassination.

“Colombia has a co-responsibility … it was Colombian mercenaries who went to kill the president of Haiti, unleashing a crisis even worse than the one they were already going through,” he said.

Petro has not commented on the Ecuador assassination.

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