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More from this issue
Tigo’s arrival marks a new chapter in Ecuador’s telecom market
After acquiring Movistar, Millicom bets on Ecuador’s digital future with ambitious expansion and modernization plans.
A Milestone Reached
Wow. When I started The Cuenca Dispatch a little over nine years ago, I never imagined we’d still be reporting Ecuador’s news all these years later. And yet, here we are—Volume 10, Issue 1. If you’ve been in Cuenca a long time, you may remember those first few months when the paper was called The […]
How Noboa’s government contained one of Ecuador’s longest strikes
Social fatigue, fractured leadership, and control of the narrative helped prevent national paralysis
Cuenca’s health construction boom reshapes the city’s skyline
Major hospitals and clinics lead a $35 million wave of healthcare development across the city.
Noboa accuses Correist factions of funding effort to topple his government
President says frozen accounts revealed plots to use protest funds for destabilization and political gain.
Cocaine routes shift as U.S. patrols tighten grip on Ecuador’s high seas
Joint maritime operations expose growing drug networks stretching from Manabí to the Galápagos.
Ecuador’s referendum battle ignites as Conaie leads protests and government mounts costly “Yes” blitz
Indigenous leaders call for resistance while the ruling party floods social media with lavish pro-government ads.
Pirates from Ecuador and Peru: the logistical arm of drug trafficking behind the extortion of artisanal fishermen
Drug traffickers have built a violent alliance with sea pirates in Peruvian and Ecuadorian ports. The criminals extort the fishermen, rob them when they don’t pay, and even force them to transport drugs across the ocean. In Ecuador, 45 fishermen were killed in 2024, and in Peru, 24 died violently at the hands of pirates. […]
Ecuador intensifies crackdown on wildlife trafficking
Government rescues thousands of animals and seizes thousands more in nationwide operations.
Troops strike illegal mines as Noboa warns of gold-fueled criminal boom
Published on November 04, 2025

Military offensives in Azuay coincide with government claims that soaring gold prices have made illegal mining nearly as lucrative as narcotics.

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