PROTESTING POLICE THROW ECUADOR INTO CAOS

PROTESTING POLICE THROW ECUADOR INTO CAOS

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PROTESTING POLICE THROW ECUADOR INTO COMPLETE CHAOS.......

All Hell has broke loose in Ecuador!

Hundreds of police protesting a new law that cuts their benefits plunged this small South American nation into chaos on this morning of Thursday, shutting down airports and blocking highways in a nationwide strike.

Rebellious officers shoved President Rafael Correa around and pelted him with tear gas and water when he tried to speak with a group of them at a police barracks in the capital and Correa 47, was hospitalized from the effects of the gas.

"If you want to kill the president, here he is! Kill me!" said Correa, refusing to back down. He was walking with the aid of a cane because his right knee was operated on just last week.

There were reports of widespread violence against the government, but speaking by telephone from a hospital room where he said he was hooked to an intravenous drip to help him recover, Correa called the unrest "an attemted coup by the oppossition" and said "history will judge them."

Venezuela's leftist president, Hugo Chavez, said in a Twitter message that "they are trying to oust President Correa."

Other leaders in the region expressed firm support for Correa.

Peru's president, Alan Garcia, announced that he was shutting the country's border with Ecuador until Correa's "democratic authority" was re-established.

The protest appeared to have arisen spontaneously, however. There was no immediate evidence it was organized by the opposition and no protest leaders emerged to denounce the government.

The rebellious officers took over police barracks in Quito, Guayaquil and other cities. They also set up roadblocks out of burning tires that cut off highway access to the capital.

Schools shut down in Quito and many businesses closed due to the absence of police protection that left citizens and businesses vulnerable to crime.

Looting was reported in the capital — where at least two banks were sacked — and in the coastal city Guayaquil. That city's main newspaper, El Universo, reported assaults on supermarkets and robberies due to the absence of police.

The U.S. Embassy issued a message warning U.S. citizens" of a "nationwide strike by all levels of police, including military police." It warned them to "stay in their homes or current location, if safe."

The Quito newspaper La Hora quoted the armed forces chief, Luiz Gonzalez, as saying that the military was loyal to Correa. However the National Assembly building was occupied by striking police.

A crowd of hundreds of Correa supporters gathered outside.

The president's policy coordination minister, Doris Soliz, asked Ecuadoreans to be calm and support the government.

"This is an act of indiscipline that is going to be controlled. It is being controlled," she said. "The military chiefs are completely supporting democracy."

The striking police were angered by a law passed by Congress on Wednesday that would end the practice of giving members of Ecuador's military and police medals and bonuses with each promotion. It would also extend from 5 to 7 years the usual period required for before a subsequent promotion.

"They are a bunch of ungrateful bandits," Correa said of the protesters. "No one has supported the police as much as this government," he told reporters.

The law needs to be published before it takes effect and that has not happened.

Air force troops shut down the Quito's Mariscal Sucre airport as the protests commenced Thursday morning. An airport official who refused to give her name said its "operations have been suspended."

The airport's president, Philippe Baril, told a local radio station that 300 troops had occupied runways, forcing flight cancelations. About 700 passengers were stranded, he said.

The U.S. Embassy said Guayaquil's airport was also closed.

Dozens of Correa supporters marched toward the city center to support him.

Traditionally unstable politically, this nation of 14 million has seen relative peace and stability since Correa, a U.S.-trained economist allied with Venezuela's President Hugo Chavez, took office in January 2007.