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- 2010_Ecuador_crisis abstract "The 2010 Ecuador crisis took place on 30 September 2010, when elements of the National Police blockaded highways, occupied the National Parliament, blocked the Mariscal Sucre International Airport in Quito and the José Joaquín de Olmedo International Airport in Guayaquil, and took over TV Ecuador's station, in what they claimed was a strike to oppose a government-sponsored law that supposedly reduced their benefits. Since the early hours of Thursday morning, unrest and looting had been reported in seven provincial capitals of the country due to the lack of law enforcement.President Rafael Correa went to the police headquarters in Quito and, after being ill-received, he made a harsh speech in which he accused the police ranks of treason to the people and the country, and dared them to kill him. After he was pelted by the rebellious police ranks and a tear gas canister went off, Correa was escorted to a hospital in the same compound. According to El País, the New York Times, El Correo and Correa himself, the rebellious policemen then surrounded the building and prevented him from leaving. From the hospital, Correa declared a state of emergency and said that a "coup d'état was taking place", and attributed responsibility to the government's opposition. According to state news agency ANDES, police radio recordings from the night of 30 September revealed that the police intended to kill Correa. Thousands of civilians came out to support Correa and gathered around the hospital in which he was held hostage. Clashes occurred between rebellious police forces and loyal army and police forces, who successfully rescued Correa after he had allegedly been held for 10 hours at the hospital.Ecuador's Health Minister said the events had left eight dead and 274 people wounded. Of the casualties, it is known that one was a university student, and that a police officer and two military personnel involved in the rescue operation were also among those killed.The Union of South American Nations (UNASUR), the Spanish Prime Minister José Luis Rodríguez Zapatero, and the Secretary-General of the Organization of American States, José Miguel Insulza referred to the events as an attempted coup d'état.".
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- 2010_Ecuador_crisis wikiPageExternalLink ecuador_declares_state_of_emergency_as.
- 2010_Ecuador_crisis wikiPageExternalLink cronologia-de-sublevacion-de-policias-en-ecuador-433064.html.
- 2010_Ecuador_crisis wikiPageID "29008537".
- 2010_Ecuador_crisis wikiPageRevisionID "603094489".
- 2010_Ecuador_crisis hasPhotoCollection 2010_Ecuador_crisis.
- 2010_Ecuador_crisis subject Category:2010_in_Ecuador.
- 2010_Ecuador_crisis subject Category:2010_in_politics.
- 2010_Ecuador_crisis subject Category:2010s_coups_d'état_and_coup_attempts.
- 2010_Ecuador_crisis subject Category:Attempted_coups.
- 2010_Ecuador_crisis subject Category:Conflicts_in_2010.
- 2010_Ecuador_crisis subject Category:Military_history_of_Ecuador.
- 2010_Ecuador_crisis subject Category:Politics_of_Ecuador.
- 2010_Ecuador_crisis comment "The 2010 Ecuador crisis took place on 30 September 2010, when elements of the National Police blockaded highways, occupied the National Parliament, blocked the Mariscal Sucre International Airport in Quito and the José Joaquín de Olmedo International Airport in Guayaquil, and took over TV Ecuador's station, in what they claimed was a strike to oppose a government-sponsored law that supposedly reduced their benefits.".
- 2010_Ecuador_crisis label "2010 Ecuador crisis".
- 2010_Ecuador_crisis label "30 S".
- 2010_Ecuador_crisis label "30S (Ecuador)".
- 2010_Ecuador_crisis label "Crise no Equador de 2010".
- 2010_Ecuador_crisis label "Crise politique équatorienne de 2010".
- 2010_Ecuador_crisis label "Kryzys polityczny w Ekwadorze (2010)".
- 2010_Ecuador_crisis label "Meuterei in Ecuador 2010".
- 2010_Ecuador_crisis label "Беспорядки в Эквадоре (2010)".
- 2010_Ecuador_crisis sameAs Meuterei_in_Ecuador_2010.
- 2010_Ecuador_crisis sameAs 30S_(Ecuador).
- 2010_Ecuador_crisis sameAs Crise_politique_équatorienne_de_2010.
- 2010_Ecuador_crisis sameAs 30_S.
- 2010_Ecuador_crisis sameAs Kryzys_polityczny_w_Ekwadorze_(2010).
- 2010_Ecuador_crisis sameAs Crise_no_Equador_de_2010.
- 2010_Ecuador_crisis sameAs m.0dgqwdy.
- 2010_Ecuador_crisis sameAs Q1787420.
- 2010_Ecuador_crisis sameAs Q1787420.
- 2010_Ecuador_crisis wasDerivedFrom 2010_Ecuador_crisis?oldid=603094489.
- 2010_Ecuador_crisis isPrimaryTopicOf 2010_Ecuador_crisis.