Now the Citizens
Revolution is of everyone
•
Affirms Rafael Correa during re-inauguration
ceremony in Ecuador
•
Sends an embrace to Fidel
QUITO,
August 10. —Ecuadorian President Rafael Correa began
his second constitutional mandate from today to 2013
with the express will of intensifying the Citizens
Revolution and prioritizing the poor, youth and
indigenous peoples.
"The Citizens Revolution has arrived and is now
that of everyone," Correa affirmed during his
vibrant and improvised speech at the end of an
official ceremony in the National Assembly, attended
by heads of state participating in summits of the
Union of South American Nations (UNASUR) and the
Bolivarian Alternative for the Peoples of Our
America (ALBA).
The 46-year-old president, who has been leading
the country for the past 31 months after his broad
popular triumph in the November 26 elections, is
initiating a new four-year term on the 200th
anniversary of the independence of Ecuador, after
winning the elections in April.
Referring to his government’s international
policy, Correa emphasized Ecuador’s support in the
OAS General Assembly for the repeal of the infamous
resolution that excluded Cuba in 1962, and asked
Cuban President Raúl Castro to pass on an embrace
for the leader Fidel Castro and for all the people
on the island.
In the same context, he reiterated the demand for
the expulsion and trial of the usurpers of power in
Honduras and the restoration of Manuel Zelaya, the
legitimate constitutional president, to his post.
Zelaya was present at the ceremony.
"A few days ago the last foreign soldier
stationed in our country left Ecuadorian soil,"
Correa stated in reference to the former U.S. Manta
base, adding: "Thus we have recovered the
territorial sovereignty that submissive governments
handed over in the past.
He strongly criticized Colombia’s decision to
allow the installation of seven bases with U.S.
troops in its territory and stated that hopefully
these would not stimulate the Bogotá government’s
warmongering policies and be utilized to combat
progressive governments in the region, rather than
to combat drug trafficking.
Rafael Correa was reelected within a new
constitutional framework in the April, 2009
elections, after Ecuadorians approved a new
constitution in September, 2008. (PL)