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Courthouse News Service Courthouse News Service

Mexico takes Ecuador to international court over embassy raid

Security forces stormed the embassy on Friday night to arrest former Ecuadoran Vice President Jorge Glas, who is wanted on corruption charges and had been granted asylum by Mexico.

MEXICO CITY, Mexico (AFP) — Mexico said Thursday it had filed a lawsuit against Ecuador at the International Court of Justice in The Hague over the storming of its embassy in Quito.

Foreign Minister Alicia Barcena told a news conference that in its lawsuit, Mexico is requesting that Ecuador be suspended from the United Nations unless it issues a public apology "recognizing the violations of the fundamental principles and norms of international law."

She said the goal was to "guarantee the reparation of the moral damage inflicted on the Mexican state and its nationals." 

Security forces stormed the embassy on Friday night to arrest former Ecuadoran Vice President Jorge Glas, who is wanted on corruption charges and had been granted asylum by Mexico.

The rare incursion on inviolable diplomatic territory sparked an international outcry, and led Mexico to break ties with Ecuador, pulling its diplomats out of the country.

At the same news conference, Mexican President Andres Manuel Lopez Obrador said the goal of the suit was "that this doesn't repeat itself in any other country in the world, that international law is guaranteed."

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After his capture, Glas, 54, was taken to a maximum security jail in Ecuador's port city of Guayaquil — notorious for violent prison riots and drug-related gang violence.

His friend and former boss Rafael Correa, who was president between 2007 and 2017, wrote on X Wednesday that Glas "is on a hunger strike."

Glas was returned to prison Tuesday after a short hospital stay that officials said was brought on by his refusal to eat for 24-hours.

Correa claimed in his social media post to have received confirmation that "the medical emergency was a suicide attempt" by Glas.

Correa is living in exile in Belgium to avoid serving an eight-year corruption sentence in Ecuador.

Glas, who had already served time on corruption charges, was the subject of a fresh arrest warrant for allegedly diverting funds intended for reconstruction efforts after a devastating earthquake in 2016.

The embassy intrusion triggered a political storm. Mexico, several other Latin American states, Spain, the European Union, United States and the U.N. chief condemned it as a violation of the 1961 Vienna Convention governing diplomatic relations.

A German foreign ministry source confirmed that Glas also has German citizenship.

"We are following Mr. Glas's case very closely and are trying to seek direct contact with him through the Ecuadoran authorities," the source told AFP.

By Agence France-Presse

Categories / International

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