10/16/2025 | Press release | Distributed by Public on 10/16/2025 11:00
October 16, 2025- The undersigned organizations express our deep concern about the escalation of violence, repression and militarization by the Ecuadorian State against the social protests initiated on September 21, 2025, by the indigenous movement of Ecuador. In recent weeks, the persecution and criminalization of human rights defenders and social organizations, who legitimately exercise their rights to mobilize, to freedom of expression, and to defend human rights and the rights of nature have reached alarming levels of human rights violations.
In recent days, photos and videos of military and police convoys controlling public order, with the use of firearms and tear gas in inhabited areas, have flooded the media and social networks. They constitute clear evidence of the disproportionate and violent response by Daniel Noboa's government to the social mobilizations taking place in different parts of the country. The data documented by Ecuadorian civil society organizations is alarming: more than 282 people have been injured, 172 people were detained, and 15 persons were temporarily disappeared. At least three people were killed, including 46-year-old Kichwa indigenous leader Efraín Fuerez 30-year-old Jose Alberto Guamán Izam, a farmer and father of two from the community of Cachibiro and Rosa Elena Paqui, a 61-year-old Saraguro indigenous woman, died of cardiorespiratory arrest caused by tear gas inhalation. The repression has also affected the press, with journalists being attacked, detained, and having their work equipment destroyed. Military operations continue in several provinces of the country, causing the continuous increase of the number of victims. Raids without warrants, internet and telephone cuts in the provinces where protests are taking place, and summary deportations have been reported.
In addition to this grave scenario of violence in the streets, numerous reports of the criminalization of social organizations and human and environmental rights defenders have been received. Indigenous and human rights defenders and organizations are being legally persecuted on charges of illicit enrichment, interuption of public services, terrorism, sabotage, and the freezing of bank accounts belonging to indigenous and human rights defenders and organizations.
Public statements by national government ministers and President Daniel Noboa himself stigmatize protesters and indigenous peoples using racist discourses and accusing them of involvement. Additionally, the Ecuadorian government ignores the various calls from the international community to implement measures of dialogue and mediation, to acknowledge the demands of the population, to assure the respect of human rights, and to end the current social conflict, in accordance with the principles of democratic coexistence inherent to the rule of law.
On October 8, 2025, seven United Nations Rapporteurs-including those on Human Rights Defenders, the Environment, Indigenous Peoples, Toxic Substances, Judicial Independence, Freedom of Association, and Business and Human Rights-sent an official communication to the Ecuadorian State (Ref. OL ECU 7/2025) expressing their concern over the repression, militarization of public space, and institutional reforms that weaken environmental protection and the rights of peoples.
Despite these statements and calls to establish dialogue by the Office of the United Nations High Commissioner for Human Rights and the Inter-American Commission on Human Rights, the Ecuadorian government has shown no willingness to open spaces for negotiation or to end the violence. On the contrary, it has intensified the militarization and criminalization of protest, seriously affecting the rights to life and physical integrity, freedom of peaceful assembly and association, freedom of expression, and access to justice.
On October 14, 2025, members of the European Parliament (MEPs) published a letter expressing their concern about the repression, the weakening of justice, and the criminalization of human rights defenders and journalists. The MEPs urge the European Union to issue a public statement, send an observation mission, and temporarily review the EU-Ecuador Trade Agreement, in accordance with the human rights and democracy clauses.
These international calls demonstrate global concern about the authoritarian and violent actions of the Ecuadorian state. However, the government continued its response of repression, stigmatization and military response to legitimate social demands. The lack of cooperation with international mechanisms, the political use of the justice system to criminalize human rights organizations and defenders, and the systematic repression of indigenous communities and civil society, reveal a profound deterioration of the constitutional state of rights and justice.
The undersigned organizations make the following urgent calls:
To the Ecuadorian State: to immediately cease the disproportionate, indiscriminate, and arbitrary use of force, to guarantee full respect for human rights, and to establish spaces for genuine dialogue with mobilized indigenous, social, and civil organizations.
To the Attorney General's Office of Ecuador: to withdraw the charges against social organizations and human rights defenders and guarantee that they can continue with the legitimate exercise of monitoring and denouncing violations that occur in the context of the protests.
To Ecuadorian Human rights institutions, especially the Defensoria del Pueblo of Ecuador, to fulfill their mandate to monitor, oversee, and demand strict compliance with the Ecuadorian State's human rights obligations, with particular attention to the context of protests in the country.
We call on international and regional human rights systems, European and multilateral states and institutions to maintain active, sustained, and coordinated observation of the situation in Ecuador, and to take the necessary measures to prevent further escalation of violence and ensure accountability of the responsible authorities.
Defending life, land, human rights, and freedom of expression cannot be criminalized. Peace cannot be imposed by force: it is built on truth, justice, and dialogue.
Signatories