Europe > Western Europe > France > Franco-Brazilian journalist beaten-up in Ecuador leaves the country but promises to return

France: Franco-Brazilian journalist beaten-up in Ecuador leaves the country but promises to return

2015/08/25

Although an Ecuadorian judge last week rejected the authorities request to deport Picq, sending it back to the Ministry of Interior for re-consideration, Picq elected to leave the country, pledging to return and fight her case at a later date.

The government claimed Picq’s visa had long ago expired, implying she was staying in the country illegally.  Detained, beaten-up and threatened with deportation: Franco-Brazilian journalist Manuela Picq experienced the rough edges of Ecuador's political system after attending an anti-government rally this month backed by union bosses and indigenous leaders.

The official statement of Manuela Picq's arrest on the Ecuadorian Ministry of Interior web-page states the journalist was being assaulted by unknown people at the same time as the national police came to her aid and gave her medical and psychological assistance.

The newspaper El Comercio shared a video in which the detention downtown in the national capital Quito can be clearly seen.

Picq — an academic and regular contributor of Al Jazeera — was subsequently taken to the Hospital Eugenio Espejo. At 11 pm local time fifty police officers arrived outside the emergency ward. Part the police officers, there were some carrying anti-riot oarlocks and shields, the newspaper El Comercio reported.

The following day, however, Picq wrote on her Facebook page that her visa had been cancelled. The journalist, who has been living in Ecuador for eight years, alleged police violence in an interview with the newspaper El Comercio:

“My visa expires on the 28th of this month and it is renewed on an annual basis. It is certainly a legal and valid document that was cancelled arbitrarily and abruptly this morning. Yesterday, I was not staying illegally and I was arrested without any reason, there were no causes for my detention…As a human being, I feel a mixture of a lot of things; I received a strike with a gun to my face, I lost my left eye vision for several hours last night, thankfully I'm ok. I was beaten up badly; I was treated like a criminal only for walking the streets”.

Her case promptly reached the crowd-sourcing petitioner Change.org under the headline Stop the Deportation of Manuela Picq.

The letter, which raises alarm over the violent treatment accorded to Picq, is addressed to President Rafael Correa and has gathered additional than 8,000 signatures.

Picq's problems may have come about due to her relationship with a prominent indigenous leader present at the turmoil, Carlos Perez Guartambel.

Guartambel leads the Confederation of Peoples of Kichwa of Ecuador (Ecuarunari) and is as well Picq's life partner. Ecuarunari is affiliated to a broader indigenous movement represented by the Confederation of the Indigenous Nationalities of Ecuador (Conaie), that backed workers’ calls for the turmoil.

The indigenous leader, who has inflamed the government by leading opposition towards several mining projects, told journalists that what had happened to Picq was part of a concerted government campaign of threats and intimidation against him and his organization. The rally saw additional than 70 persons arrested throughout the country.

Manuela Picq has since announced that she will try to obtain a visa to return to Ecuador and that she will file a law suit against the government before the Inter-American Court of Human Rights to investigate the crime of violation of constitutional rights and migration.

Related Articles
  • French President Francois Hollande walks on the Ujibashi bridge as he visits the Ise-Jingu Shrine in Ise

    2016/05/28 French President François Hollande pledged Friday he would press on with his labor reforms, despite strikes that have paralyzed the country. In a press conference on the sidelines of the G-7 summit in Japan, Hollande said, “I will keep going because I think these are good reforms,” adding that his government would ensure “freedom of movement” for citizens among rail strikes and fuel blockades. Addressing the unrest, he said, “We can’t accept that there are unions that dictate the law,” adding, “As chief of national, I want this reform. It fits with everything we have done for four years. I want us to go right to the end.”
  • France Business sentiment stable in January

    2016/01/28 According to the INSSE business climate survey, the business confidence indicator remained stable in January at December’s 102 points, which had marked a three-month high. Thus, the indicator remains slightly above the long-term 100-point average, which is the benchmark measure the INSEE uses to distinguish between improving and worsening business expectations. According to the INSEE, the result came on the back of improvements in businesses’ assessment regarding their personal and general production expectations, which offset a fall in completed activity and inventories.
  • France asks EU partners for new sanctions on Iran

    2016/01/28 France has asked its European Union partners to consider new sanctions on Iran for its recent missile tests, officials have told The Associated Press, even as Paris welcomed the president of the Islamic Republic, which is flush with funds from the lifting of other sanctions over Tehran's nuclear program. The ambiguous signals emerging Wednesday from France came as President Hassan Rouhani, a relative moderate elected in 2013, signed billions of dollars in business deals on an before stop in Italy and met with Pope Francis in the initial such Iranian foray into Europe since 1999. France hopes for similarly lucrative deals during Rouhani's two-day visit, along with regional peacemaking efforts as the once-pariah national emerges from decades of isolation.
  • France Consumer confidence remains stable in December,

    2016/01/17 The consumer confidence indicator elaborated by the National Statistics Institute (INSEE) remained stable in December at November’s 96 points. The result slightly overshot the 95 points the markets had expected. As a result, the consumer confidence indicator remained below its long-term average of 100. In its statement, INSEE pointed out that the result came on the back of an development in consumers’ opinions regarding their next financial prospects over the previous month, which offset a deterioration in households’ completed financial situation. Household’s saving capacity remained virtually stable over the previous month.