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Former Ecuador coup leader back in spotlight
Tue Apr 28, 2009 3:43pm EDT
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By Frank Jack Daniel
QUITO (Reuters) - Lucio Gutierrez, a former Ecuadorean president who toppled by protests four years ago, has resurrected his political career by emerging from elections as the leading opponent to President Rafael Correa.
Correa, a leftist, cruised to a widely expected re-election victory in Sunday's general election with 52 percent of the vote, the first candidate to win in the first round of voting in Ecuador's 30-year-old democracy.
But Gutierrez, a former coup leader who ran against him on a platform of low taxes and small government, surprised analysts by taking 30 percent.
Seen as an outsider when he announced he was running again for office less than four years after he fled the presidential palace in a helicopter, the result effectively makes him the OPEC nation's opposition leader.
That title was formerly held by banana mogul and four-time presidential candidate Alvaro Noboa, who limped into third place on Sunday with 11 percent of the vote.
Gutierrez has not yet formally accepted the result of the election, alleging fraud at some polling stations. A rowdy group of his supporters tried to force their way into the electoral commission building on Tuesday.
"I call to resistance all Ecuadoreans who voted for Lucio Gutierrez," he said in televised statements. But experts said it was unlikely he would mobilize big protests.
On Monday he began adopting his role as the country's most visible opposition figure.
"The people have given us a huge responsibility -- to lead the opposition," the clean-cut and deep-voiced Gutierrez said then. "We will be dignified and firm."
Gutierrez has a colorful past. As an army colonel he led a coup in 2000, then ran for president and won in elections two years later on a left-wing ticket he quickly dropped once in office to back an unpopular trade deal with the United States.
He was ousted after weeks of street protests and turmoil in Congress and sought asylum in Brazil. Returning a few months later he was arrested but was released in 2006.
Gutierrez says he was illegally removed from power and once gave a faux state-of-the-nation speech from a jail cell.
He will now look to build on support in mainly indigenous rural areas with an eye to elections in four years time.
"We can't lower our guard, the war continues and we are going to keep fighting in defense of our country," Gutierrez said after the vote.
"INTELLECTUAL LIMITATIONS" Continued...
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