Global Journalist

Tug-of-War

Point of contact: Where Ecuador's government and press clashed

History of Ecuador's President, Rafael Correa

In 1963 when Rafael Correa was born, Ecuador was one of the poorest countries in South America. Correa grew up in a working-class family in the city of Guayaquil, a business and manufacturing hub. It was a time of political upheaval; just three months after Correa’s birth, a military junta overthrew the president. Forty-three years later, Correa would become president of Ecuador.

When Correa was 5, his father was arrested and imprisoned for three years in the U.S. He had tried to smuggle cocaine into the country. His family of four children struggled financially, but Rafael and his brother, Fabricio, attended a prestigious catholic high school on scholarships. Later Rafael studied economics on scholarship at a catholic university in the city. Next, he spent a year with a Catholic mission in Zumbahua, a poverty-stricken area in the highlands about 159 miles north of Guayaquil. There he taught locals about developing small businesses and learned some of the indigenous language Quichua.

He met his wife, Anne Malherb, in Belgium when he attended graduate school there in 1991 after he won another scholarship. In 2001 he earned a Ph.D. from the University of Illinois. He returned to Ecuador and taught Economics at Quito's San Francisco University. In 2005 he took the post of finance minister, and that same year, he and his brother, Fabricio, founded the political party Alianza PAIS (Sovereign Fatherland Alliance).

Between 2005 and 2006, Rafael ran for president under the party calling for constitutional change. His party also signed an alliance with the Socialist Party of Ecuador. His campaign promoted social development over foreign debt payment and free trade with foreign countries. In 2006 he was elected president and sworn into office in January 2007.

Since that time, he has been committed to reducing poverty in the nation and increasing the sovereignty of the government. His press freedom violations have drawn international ire and attention.

To conclude, read a World Report 2011by Human Rights Watch

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