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¡Alfaro Vive, Carajo!

¡Alfaro Vive, Carajo! (AVC) (English: Alfaro Lives, Dammit![1]), another name for the Fuerzas Armadas Populares Eloy Alfaro (English: Eloy Alfaro Popular Armed Forces), was a clandestine left-wing group in Ecuador, founded in 1982 and named after popular government leader and general Eloy Alfaro.[2] The group was labeled as a terrorist organization for the Ecuadorian state[3][4][5][6][7][8][9][10] during the period of the former president León Febres Cordero, existing between 1983 and 1991, years where they carried out various armed actions and criminal acts in Ecuador,[11] with Colombian (M-19) and Nicaraguan (Nicaraguan Revolution) influence.[12] The group was initially formed sometime in the 1970s, but was not active militarily for the first few years of the 80's.[13]

The motto of the group

An openly leftist organization, but not Marxist, they identified with the Democratic Left coalition. The AVC first received national attention in 1983, when it broke into a museum and stole swords used by former president and leader of the liberal revolution, Eloy Alfaro. Some of the group's leaders were thought to be affiliated with Cuba, Libya and Nicaragua, and the group itself was linked to militant groups in other Latin American countries, such as M-19[14] and the Tupac Amaru Revolutionary Movement, establishing a group of joint operations called America Battalion with these two groups. Between 1986 and 1987, AVC carried out several kidnappings, robbed banks and a factory, seized several radio stations to broadcast their manifesto, and killed four policemen while retrieving a member of the group from police custody. At its height, the AVC had between 200 and 300 members.[15] The AVC did not carry out attacks against the population or large-scale attacks since according to Santiago Kingman, the main ideologue of the AVC ...any bomb exploding alone, senseless... any killing of an unarmed person was stupid.[16]

In response to this activity, the government began conducting raids against the group. The group's leader, Arturo Jarrin, was killed during a shootout against government forces in October 1986.[13] By 1987, a large number of AVC leaders and members had been killed or arrested.[14] In 1989, the Ecuadorian government reached an agreement with the AVC, and the group agreed to end its violence.[13] In 1991, the group was officially reformed as a legitimate political party. A year later, eight members of the group made an illegal but non-violent entry into the British embassy in Quito, demanding the release of a group leader who was later imprisoned by the Ecuadorian government.[2]

They were responsible for several criminal actions, armed robberies to banks, robberies, and kidnappings; highlighting the kidnapping of Nahim Isaías Barquet, general manager of the bank Filanbanco, in September 1985, who died during the intervention for his rescue carried out by the Anti-Terrorist Unit of the Special Forces Brigade of the Ecuadorian Army, ordered by the then president León Febres-Cordero.[17] Due to the death in 1986 of its leader, Arturo Jarrín, arrests and the death of several other members in the same year as a result of the actions carried out by the security forces of the Ecuadorian State, AVC lost strength and was practically eliminated.[15][17][18] According to the book The remnant of AVC it formally handed over its weapons in 1991. The balance of the AVC campaign between 1983 and 1988 was: 16 AVC members, six members of the M-19, 14 police officers killed, more than 20 injured.[19][17][18][20]

Background edit

AVC arose during an economic crisis[21] in the 1980s. During the 1970s Ecuador experienced an annual economic growth rate of 8.1%[21] due in part to high oil prices. In 1982 the economy stagnated due to the fall in the price of oil and the simultaneous rise in interest rates in international markets. The middle and upper classes were the ones who benefited the most from the oil boom, but the popular classes were the ones who suffered the costs of the economic adjustment when the boom ended.[22]

Beginning with President Osvaldo Hurtado (1981-1984) the government of Ecuador applied measures dictated by the International Monetary Fund (IMF) to restructure the economy. These measures included: reducing fiscal spending, devaluing the local currency, and raising prices.[22] The Febres-Cordero government (1984-1988) exacerbated the economic crisis. With the lowest oil price ever recorded in 1986.[23][24]

His economic team was made up of three economists fully identified with the business sector: Carlos Julio Emanuel, Francisco Swett and Alberto Dahik.[25] They devalued the Sucre, promoting agricultural exports and favoring economic groups. At the same time, they eliminated price controls and reduced the gasoline subsidy, increasing the price of gasoline by 70 percent.[25] The impact of the crisis on the popular sectors increased unemployment and the inflation and reduced consumption.[22] The crisis was felt particularly in the poor sectors of the cities with an average fall in real urban income of 8.7 percent per year from 1981 to 1989, the most large among Latin American countries.[22]

Conformation edit

AVC was formed mainly by middle-class students with an urban guerrilla focus. It formed part of other revolutionary organizations such as the Movimiento de Izquierda Revolucionaria (MIR). The MIR had student leaders, such as:

  • Fausto Basantes and Ricardo Merino of the Mejía National Institute of Quito[26]
  • Arturo Jarrin. and Hamet Vásconez from La Salle College of Quito (currently La Salle-Conocoto)
  • Juan Cuvi and Juan Carlos Acosta from American College of Quito
  • Edgar Frías from the José Joaquín de Olmedo School, in Guayaquil.
  • There were also alumni from the Colegio Nacional Juan Pío Montúfar, Benalcázar and Cardenal Spellman schools in Quito.[27]

Arturo Jarrín entered the Central University of Ecuador in Quito, to study sociology, leaving it during his fourth year, after participating in popular organization activities in the Ciudadela Ferroviaria de Quito, he joined AVC, becoming the leader of the organization being elected at The First AVC National Conference held in Esmeraldas in February 1983, attended by around 60 guerrillas.[27] In it, the Central Command formed by three people, including Jarrín. Prior to this, in January Jarrín and other guerrillas assaulted the Banco de Fomento. AVC called all bank robberies "financial recoveries," which were the organization's primary means of financial support.[26]

Assaults edit

The following is a partial list of armed robberies of banking institutions carried out by AVC members with the respective amounts stolen. The amounts in US dollars are approximate with the price of the year in which they occurred.[28]

Date City Bank Branch Amount (USD)
July 1983 Quito Multi-exchange agency Headquarters 16,000
March 1984 Quito Multi-exchange agency Headquarters 9,000
June 1984 Quito Banco del Pacífico La Villafora 43,000
January 1985 Guayaquil Banco de Descuento Stock truck 32,000
April 1985 Guayaquil Hollandsche Bank-Unie Guayaquil branch 13,000
May 1985 Guayaquil Banco Continental Guayaquil Branch 4,000
June 1985 Quito Banco Consolidado El Labrador agency 18,000
July 1985 Guayaquil Banco La Previsora Branch No.7 14,020

History edit

The group was initially formed some time in the 1970s but was not militarily active for the first several years of its existence.[13] An avowedly leftist but non-Marxist organisation, they identified with the Democratic Left coalition.[13] AVC first received national attention in 1983, when it broke into a museum and stole swords which had been used by Eloy Alfaro. Some of the group's leaders were thought to be affiliated with Cuba, Libya and Nicaragua, and the group itself was linked to militant groups from other Latin-American countries, such as the M-19[14] and the Túpac Amaru Revolutionary Movement, establishing a joint operations group called America Battalion with these two groups.[13] From 1986 to 1987, AVC carried out several kidnappings, robbed banks and a factory, took over a number of radio stations in order to broadcast their manifesto, and killed four police officers while retrieving a group member from police custody.[14]

In response to this activity, the government began carrying out raids against the group. The group's leader Arturo Jarrin was killed during a shootout with government forces in October 1986.[13] By 1987, a large number of AVC's leaders and members had either been killed or arrested.[14] In 1989, the government of Ecuador reached an agreement with AVC, with the group agreeing to end its violence.[2][14] In 1991, the group officially reformed as a legitimate political party. One year later, eight group members made an illegal, but non-violent entry into the British Embassy in Quito, demanding the release of a group leader who was then imprisoned by the Ecuadorian government.

Robbery of the sword of Eloy Alfaro edit

 
Members of the guerrilla Alfaro Vive Carajo pose next to the Eloy Alfaro's sword.

The first operation to receive extensive media coverage was the theft of the swords of Eloy Alfaro and Pedro José Montero from the Municipal Museum of Guayaquil, on August 11.[28] In January 2012, Rosa Mireya Cárdenas, who served as Secretary of Peoples,[29] as a delegate of former AVC members, she returned the swords to the then President of Ecuador Rafael Correa.[30][31]

1983-1985 edit

Since the beginning of 1983, the AVC carried out a large number of operations, which included actions such as bank robberies and graffiti, seeking in this way to achieve loudness in the media, which according to the AVC, were controlled by the "right".[12]

The first National Conference is held between February 12 and 14, 1983 in Tonsupa Esmeraldas, where the "Eloy Alfaro People's Revolutionary Forces" are constituted, under the Slogan "Alfaro Lives, Dammit".[32] On March 11, an attempt was made to assault the payer of Casa Baca (Quito), as a result of which Ricardo Merino and Vicente López were arrested.[33] On July 8, the Bust of Eloy Alfaro was stolen from the headquarters of the Supreme Liberal Junta in Quito[33]

On September 22, at the Pululahua resort (Pichincha),[20] Jarrín, Mireya Cárdenas and Edgar Frías held a press conference in which they announced the existence of the organization.[34] On November 2, the facilities of the radio stations: Noticia, La Fabulosa and Universal de Guayaquil were seized to condemn the intervention of United States in Nicaragua.[20] At the end of 1983 Jarrín and about twenty guerrillas traveled to Libya to receive military training in one of the camps sponsored by Muamar el Gaddafi.[35] Basantes and Frías temporarily assumed control of AVC. In October, during training near Esmeraldas, Basantes and Cárdenas were arrested for illegal possession of weapons.

In April 1984, after the return of Jarrín from Libya and the release of Basantes from prison, the members of the AVC met and elected a Central Command made up of Jarrín, Basantes and Frías.[34][20] On May 4, the AVC occupied the offices of the Ecuadorian News Agency (ANE) in Guayaquil to send a message against León Febres-Cordero, then a candidate for the presidency of Ecuador, and in support of Rodrigo Borja.[34] On May 29, AVC militants abandoned pamphlets and detonated a low-power explosive in the Metropolitan Cathedral of Quito.[36]

On June 12, the brothers Ricardo and Lilian Jarrín (both disguised as religious) assaulted the Banco de los Andes in Quito.[20] On June 14, Jarrín along with half a dozen guerrillas assaulted the Banco del Pacífico, also in Quito.[34] After the robbery, Jarrín and other guerrillas took refuge in the house of Consuelo Benavides, a worker at the Ministry of Industries and an AVC sympathizer. The police captured and tortured them.[35] After the arrest of his sister and the threat of arrest of their parents by the police, Jarrín confessed his identity, his membership of the AVC and his participation in the robbery of Banco del Pacífico.[37] Benavides for her part remained detained for months, accused of illicit association.[37] She was released on April 14, 1985, after which she contacted the AVC in a rural area of Esmeraldas.[35][38]

On August 10, the day that Febres-Cordero assumed the presidency of Ecuador, the AVC took over several radio stations to announce its opposition to the incoming government.[34] In December, the AVC stole toys from a Quito factory and then distributed them among the residents of the poor neighborhoods of the city. At the end of that month Hamet Vásconez, who had been in El Salvador, arrived in Ecuador and joined the AVC Central Command, replacing Jarrín, who was detained in the García Moreno Prison in Quito.[34]

Months later on November 1, they seized the newspaper Hoy and forced to include in its edition two pages with information about the group.[39] On November 8, they kidnapped a reporter from the newspaper Meridiano de Guayaquil to force an interview with Fausto Basantes Borja.[20]

On January 2, 1985, they assaulted an armored vehicle of the Banco de Descuento in Guayaquil, resulting in the death of a guerrilla Jorge Lima Trujillo and the arrest of another.[20]

On March 12, they attacked the weapons warehouse of the National Police at the headquarters of the Central de Radiopatrullas. Seven guerrillas dressed as policemen, one with lieutenant's insignia, overpowered the five policemen on duty, cut the telephone lines, disconnected the radio system;[40] stealing 631 38 caliber revolvers, 40 carbines and several boxes of bullets.[28][40] Days later the police found part of the weapons in a vacant lot.[34] In April Hamet Vásconez was arrested and his position in the AVC Central Command was taken over by Pedro Moncada.[35] Colombian M-19 guerrilla member Fernando Carmona was also detained.[20]

On April 29 of the same year, the director of the now-defunct José Franco Piedra Institute for Agrarian Reform and Colonization was kidnapped. In an anonymous call, the Alfaro Vive group claimed responsibility for the kidnapping.[41][42] On May 10, they seized radio station Iris from Esmeraldas to broadcast an AVC proclamation.[20] On May 21, they assaulted the Continental Bank of Guayaquil.[20] On May 24 they took over the stations Z-1, 11-Q and Radio Uno from Guayaquil.[20] On May 29 they took over Radio Continente.[20]

On August 2, they assaulted a Filanbanco armored vehicle in Guayaquil, where Enrique Mejía and Joel Vargas were arrested.[20] On August 9, they assaulted a PRONACA factory on the road to El Quinche where they were arrested three members.[20] On August 30, during a police operation in the Alborada citadel in Guayaquil, a member died and four others were arrested.[43]

On October 16, they seized the embassy of Mexico in response to the rupture of their diplomatic relations with Nicaragua.[20] The same seized Radio Visión to force them to conduct an interview with Arturo Jarrín.[20] On October 25, they assaulted the Citibank agency in Quito disguised as nuns and lottery sellers.[20]

On December 7, they attacked an ENPROVIT warehouse in Durán.[20]

Escape from the prison edit

At dawn on April 28, the AVC launched an operation to free Jarrín and Vásconez from Penal García Moreno. From a nearby commercial premises they dug a tunnel through which Jarrín, Vásconez and two other members of the AVC escaped, taking advantage of the guards' shift change. The tunnel ended in the courtyard of the Prison, where the members of the AVC carried out exercises. The construction of the tunnel was supervised by Marco Troya, a former miner.[35][38]

Nahim Isaís kidnapping edit

The first kidnapping staged by AVC occurred in August 1985, when Nahim Isaías, owner of Filanbanco, was kidnapped for 26 days, dying in the operation that tried to free him. [44][45] The AVC wanted 5 million dollars for his ransom[46] with whom he planned to train guerrillas together with the Colombian M-19 and form a rural guerrilla in Ecuador. A secondary objective was to make a political statement, being part of the Ecuadorian banking and commercial oligarchy. Thinking that the government would not put Isaías's life at risk and they would negotiate a financial bailout.[16]

Juan Cuvi, Juan Carlos Acosta and Colombian guerrillas from the M-19 followed Isaías' activities for months until they found a weakness in his security measures. On August 7 they executed his plan, when Isaías arrived at his country house, known as "Las Alturas", 8 kilometers from Guayaquil on the road to Daule. [16][47] Their plan was to take him to a safe house in Manta. After the kidnapping, the guerrillas left Isaías' house in two cars: one carried the kidnapped with guerrillas and the other Juan Cuvi and Juan Carlos Acosta. Cuvi and Acosta's vehicle stopped at a gas station in Nobol where a police unit patrolling the area arrested them. The guerrillas from the second vehicle exchanged fire with the police and fled to Guayaquil, where they had to take Isaías to a house in the La Chala neighborhood.[16]

Both Cuvi and Acosta were tortured by the police and by members of military intelligence. Acosta died on August 28 in a hospital after being severely tortured.[48] Acosta was reportedly denied medical attention until his family intervened (his father was a former foreign minister),[48] according to the official version he was injured during his detention after he shot members of the police. The President of the Republic assured that he had personally intervened in the case in order to save his life.[49] According to his mother, Laura Coloma de Acosta, who visited him in the hospital earlier his body was covered in bruises and his testicles were mangled.[48]

Isaías remained kidnapped in the house in the La Chala neighborhood until August 31, when the police surrounded the house. To free him, a ransom of $10 million and a plane to leave Ecuador were demanded.[50] In accordance with the state policy of not negotiating with terrorists, on September 2 at 03:26[45] the Anti-Terrorist Unit of the Special Forces Brigade of the Ecuadorian Army was ordered to carry out a rescue operation.[17] According to the government, members of the Isaías family were present when the operation was ordered.[51] As a result, both Isaiah and his kidnappers died.[52]

The failure of this operation collapsed the AVC's first attempt to generate an economic base.[53]

Eduardo Granda kidnap attempt edit

On December 18 [20] the AVC unsuccessfully tries to kidnap Eduardo Granda, heir to the family then owner of the television channel Teleamazonas, the plan was to capture him before entering his home, in the north of Quito, but he defended himself with a gun, wounding a woman guerrilla, who would be captured in a hospital where his wound was treated.[54][34]

1986 edit

During 1986 the actions carried out by the government almost completely neutralized the AVC, seeking mainly to eliminate its leaders (Jarrín, Basantes and Vásconez).[26] The government had the support of an informant within the AVC, Fernando Flores, who agreed to help in exchange for a US visa.[26] He helped police set up an ambush on Avenida de la Prensa in Quito in which Basantes was killed on January 4.[35][55]

On January 31, they tried to blow up towers 3 and 4 of the National Interconnected System on the Panamericana Sur, km. 11–12, with dynamite charges.[20] On February 4, a pamphlet bomb was detonated in the IESS hall in Quito.[20]

In popular culture edit

The group is the subject of a 2007 documentary film titled ¡Alfaro vive carajo! Del Sueño Al Caos.[56]

The post-hardcore rock group At The Drive-In has an EP named ¡Alfaro Vive, Carajo!

Notes edit

  1. ^ Phil Gunson; Andrew Thompson; Greg Chamberlain (1989). The Dictionary of Contemporary Politics in South America. Routledge. p. 3.
  2. ^ a b c "Party Politics in the 1980s". countrystudies.us.
  3. ^ "M-19 capacitó a alfaristas y participó en sus asaltos". El Universo (in Spanish). 2010-06-19. Retrieved 2019-04-06.
  4. ^ "ANNUAL REPORT OF THE INTER-AMERICAN COMMISSION ON HUMAN RIGHTS 1988-1989". Retrieved 2015-11-25.
  5. ^ "Alfaro Vive, Carajo (AVC) | Terrorist Groups | TRAC". www.trackingterrorism.org. Retrieved 2015-11-25.
  6. ^ Terrorist Group Profiles. DIANE Publishing. 1989-08-01. ISBN 9781568068640. Retrieved 2015-11-25.
  7. ^ "NCJRS Abstract - National Criminal Justice Reference Service". Retrieved 2015-11-25.
  8. ^ El Universo. Un capítulo de la historia del país con dos visiones opuestas. 20, junio de 2010
  9. ^ Arturo Jarrín fue drogado en Panamá y traído a Ecuador en estado de inconsciencia.El Telégrafo1 de julio de 2016. El Telégrafo20 de junio de 2010
  10. ^ El Comercio. Fiscalía acusará a 13 personas por caso Arturo Jarrín. 28 de abril de 2016
  11. ^ Comisión de Defensa Jurídico-Institucional de la Policía Nacional. 2010 TERRORISMO Y SUBVERSIÓN. Por: Manuel Sarmiento Mera. Con: Varios créditos autorales. CAPÍTULO I; La búsqueda de la verdad 19, Una verdad profesional 22, La gran verdad institucional 22, Acciones delictivas cometidas en el Ecuador desde 1976 por los grupos subversivos: Alfaro Vive Carajo (AVC), Montoneras Patria Libre (MPL) y el Movimiento Colombiano 19 de abril (M-19). 1984: DIVERSIDAD DE ACCIONES DELINCUENCIALES: El 12 de junio se produce el asalto al Banco de los Andes, agencia Kennedy, en Quito. Los asaltantes Ricardo Arturo Jarrín Jarrín y Lilian Beatriz Jarrín Jarrín, miembros del grupo AVC con hábitos religiosos cometieron el atraco. Toma el mando Arturo Jarrín, adoptando el apelativo dado por la prensa todos esos años, se funda el grupo Alfaro Vive hasta su disolución en el gobierno posterior. Borja.
  12. ^ a b "Alfaro Vive Carajo: La guerrilla que conmocionó a Ecuador". Resumen Latinoamericano (in European Spanish). Retrieved 2018-06-05.
  13. ^ a b c d e f g Phil Gunson, Andrew Thompson & Greg Chamberlain, The Dictionary of Contemporary Politics of South America, London: Routledge, 1990, p. 3
  14. ^ a b c d e f "Ecuador: Internal Security". country-data.com.
  15. ^ a b Anderson, Sean; Sloan, Stephen (2009). Historical Dictionary of Terrorism. Lanham, Maryland: The Scarecrow Press. p. 14. ISBN 9780810863118.
  16. ^ a b c d Isabel Dávalos(director) (2007). Alfaro vive ¡carajo!: del sueño al caos. Ecuador: Cabeza Hueca Producciones. 35 minutes in.
  17. ^ a b c d Report of the Truth Commission (Volume 3: Case reports. Period 1984-1988). Comisión de la Verdad. 2010. ISBN 9789978928493.
  18. ^ a b Informe de la Comisión de la Verdad (Tomo 1: Violaciones de los Derechos Humanos). Comisión de la Verdad. 2010. ISBN 9789978928479.
  19. ^ Antonio Rodríguez Jaramillo (2014). Memoria de las Espadas: Alfaro Vive Carajo, los argumentos de la historia (PDF) (in Spanish). IAEN. p. 18.
  20. ^ a b c d e f g h i j k l m n o p q r s t u Comisión de Defensa Jurídico-Institucional de la Policía Nacional. (PDF) (in Spanish). Archived from the original (PDF) on 2015-09-23. Retrieved 2015-07-02.
  21. ^ a b . Diario El Mercurio - Cuenca Ecuador (in European Spanish). 2011-01-19. Archived from the original on 2017-05-10. Retrieved 2017-07-04.
  22. ^ a b c d Weiss, Wendy (1997). "Debt and Devaluation: The Burden on Ecuador's Popular Class". Latin American Perspectives. 24 (4): 9–33. doi:10.1177/0094582X9702400402. S2CID 153913444.
  23. ^ CIA (1986-04-23). (PDF). Archived from the original (PDF) on January 23, 2017.
  24. ^ "León Febres Cordero: Confrontational President of Ecuador". The Independent. 2008-12-17. Retrieved 2017-07-12.
  25. ^ a b Catherine M. Conaghan; James M. Malloy; Luis A. Abugattas (1990). "Business and the 'Boys': The Politics of Neoliberalism in the Central Andes". Latin American Research Review. 25 (2): 3–30. doi:10.1017/S0023879100023360. S2CID 252931114.
  26. ^ a b c d Terán, Juan. (PDF). Editorial Último Recurso. Archived from the original (PDF) on 2014-02-27. Retrieved 2009-01-07.
  27. ^ a b Jijón (1986-11-07). Alfaro vive ¡carajo!: del robo de la espada a la sangre de Jarrín. Vistazo. pp. 4–10.
  28. ^ a b c Zambranod, Alfonso (1990). Ran Gazit: La sombra tras el poder. Guayaquil: EDINO.
  29. ^ "The swords arouse differences in the former AVC". El Comercio. Retrieved 2016-03-29.
  30. ^ "Swords of Alfaro and Montero were delivered to President Correa". El Telégrafo (in Spanish). 2012-01-28. Retrieved 2017-07-20.
  31. ^ "Patrimonio certifies that Alfaro's sword is genuine". El Telégrafo. 2012-01-31.
  32. ^ Rodríguez Jaramillo, Antonio (2014). Memoria de las Espadas: Alfaro Vive Carajo, los argumentos de la historia (PDF) (in Spanish). IAEN. p. 41.
  33. ^ a b Rodríguez Jaramillo, Antonio (2014). Memoria de las Espadas: Alfaro Vive Carajo, los argumentos de la historia (PDF) (in Spanish). IAEN. p. 133.
  34. ^ a b c d e f g h Terán, Juan. (PDF). Editorial Último Recurso. Archived from the original (PDF) on 2014-02-27. Retrieved 2009-01-07.
  35. ^ a b c d e f Rodolfo, Pérez. . Diccionario Biográfico del Ecuador (in Spanish). Archived from the original on 2009-02-01. Retrieved 2009-01-07.
  36. ^ "GTD ID:198405290001". Global Terrorism Database. Retrieved 2023-01-15.
  37. ^ a b Jarrín, Ricardo (1991). "El cementerio de los vivos". Ediciones C.T.E. Quito.{{cite book}}: CS1 maint: location missing publisher (link)
  38. ^ a b Jarrín, Juan luis (2004). "Introducción a El cementerio de los vivos, Tercera Edición". Comité Ecuatoriano contra la Impunidad. Quito.{{cite book}}: CS1 maint: location missing publisher (link)
  39. ^ "Un capítulo de la historia del país con dos visiones opuestas". El Universo (in Spanish). 20 June 2010. Retrieved 2015-11-28.
  40. ^ a b Un detenido y ninguna pista en asalto a recinto policial. El Universo. 1985-03-15.
  41. ^ "Un Día como hoy". El Universo. May 2010. Retrieved 2023-01-15.
  42. ^ "GTD ID:198504290008". Global Terrorism Database. Retrieved 2023-01-15.
  43. ^ Tamayo G., Eduardo. "Gobierno de León Febres Cordero (1984-1988)" (PDF). Resistencias al Autoritarismo. Retrieved 2017-07-27.
  44. ^ "31 años del asesinato de Nahim Isaías Barquet". Ecuavisa (in Spanish). 2016-09-02. Retrieved 2017-12-12.
  45. ^ a b "2 de septiembre de 1985". El Universo (in Spanish). 2016-08-30. Retrieved 2017-12-12.
  46. ^ "Un capítulo de la historia del país con dos visiones opuestas". El Universo (in Spanish). 20 June 2010. Retrieved 2015-11-28.
  47. ^ "Ecuadorian Troops Trap Kidnappers of Banker". The New York Times. 1985-09-01.
  48. ^ a b c Fellner, Jamie; Wendy Gimbel; Diego García-Sayán (1988). Human Rights in Ecuador. New York: Americas Watch Committee and Andean Commission of Jurists. ISBN 0938579592.
  49. ^ Documentary Alfaro Lives from the dream to CHAOS 8. LibreRed. 2009-04-30. Retrieved 2017-07-14 – via YouTube.
  50. ^ "Rebels Hold Ecuadoran Banker". The Washington Post. 1985-09-01.
  51. ^ Documental Alfaro Vive del sueño al CAOS 7. LibreRed. 2009-05-16. Retrieved 2017-07-14 – via YouTube.
  52. ^ "Ecuadorian Banker Is Slain with Abductors". The New York Times. 1985-09-03.
  53. ^ Antonio Rodríguez Jaramillo (2014). Memoria de las Espadas: Alfaro Vive Carajo, los argumentos de la historia (PDF) (in Spanish). IAEN. p. 60.
  54. ^ Jijón, Carlos (1986-01-10). "Golpe mortal a Alfaro Vive". Vistazo. pp. 10–13.
  55. ^ "Former AVC leadership takes root in legal life". El Comercio. 2005-10-08.
  56. ^ "¡Alfaro vive carajo! "del sueño al caos" (Isabel Dávalos / Ecuador / 90 minutos)". Cero Latitud.

References edit

  • "Annual Report Of The Inter-American Commission On Human Rights 1988-1989: Resolution No 14/89 Case 9641 Ecuador April 12, 1989". Inter-American Commission on Human Rights.
  • "Alfaro Vive Carajo rechaza uso de nombre en video". www.hoy.com.ec. 2007-08-11.

alfaro, vive, carajo, drive, help, expand, this, article, with, text, translated, from, corresponding, article, spanish, september, 2022, click, show, important, translation, instructions, view, machine, translated, version, spanish, article, machine, translat. For the At the Drive In EP see Alfaro Vive Carajo EP You can help expand this article with text translated from the corresponding article in Spanish September 2022 Click show for important translation instructions View a machine translated version of the Spanish article Machine translation like DeepL or Google Translate is a useful starting point for translations but translators must revise errors as necessary and confirm that the translation is accurate rather than simply copy pasting machine translated text into the English Wikipedia Consider adding a topic to this template there are already 5 155 articles in the main category and specifying topic will aid in categorization Do not translate text that appears unreliable or low quality If possible verify the text with references provided in the foreign language article You must provide copyright attribution in the edit summary accompanying your translation by providing an interlanguage link to the source of your translation A model attribution edit summary is Content in this edit is translated from the existing Spanish Wikipedia article at es Alfaro Vive Carajo see its history for attribution You should also add the template Translated es Alfaro Vive Carajo to the talk page For more guidance see Wikipedia Translation Alfaro Vive Carajo AVC English Alfaro Lives Dammit 1 another name for the Fuerzas Armadas Populares Eloy Alfaro English Eloy Alfaro Popular Armed Forces was a clandestine left wing group in Ecuador founded in 1982 and named after popular government leader and general Eloy Alfaro 2 The group was labeled as a terrorist organization for the Ecuadorian state 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 during the period of the former president Leon Febres Cordero existing between 1983 and 1991 years where they carried out various armed actions and criminal acts in Ecuador 11 with Colombian M 19 and Nicaraguan Nicaraguan Revolution influence 12 The group was initially formed sometime in the 1970s but was not active militarily for the first few years of the 80 s 13 The motto of the groupAn openly leftist organization but not Marxist they identified with the Democratic Left coalition The AVC first received national attention in 1983 when it broke into a museum and stole swords used by former president and leader of the liberal revolution Eloy Alfaro Some of the group s leaders were thought to be affiliated with Cuba Libya and Nicaragua and the group itself was linked to militant groups in other Latin American countries such as M 19 14 and the Tupac Amaru Revolutionary Movement establishing a group of joint operations called America Battalion with these two groups Between 1986 and 1987 AVC carried out several kidnappings robbed banks and a factory seized several radio stations to broadcast their manifesto and killed four policemen while retrieving a member of the group from police custody At its height the AVC had between 200 and 300 members 15 The AVC did not carry out attacks against the population or large scale attacks since according to Santiago Kingman the main ideologue of the AVC any bomb exploding alone senseless any killing of an unarmed person was stupid 16 In response to this activity the government began conducting raids against the group The group s leader Arturo Jarrin was killed during a shootout against government forces in October 1986 13 By 1987 a large number of AVC leaders and members had been killed or arrested 14 In 1989 the Ecuadorian government reached an agreement with the AVC and the group agreed to end its violence 13 In 1991 the group was officially reformed as a legitimate political party A year later eight members of the group made an illegal but non violent entry into the British embassy in Quito demanding the release of a group leader who was later imprisoned by the Ecuadorian government 2 They were responsible for several criminal actions armed robberies to banks robberies and kidnappings highlighting the kidnapping of Nahim Isaias Barquet general manager of the bank Filanbanco in September 1985 who died during the intervention for his rescue carried out by the Anti Terrorist Unit of the Special Forces Brigade of the Ecuadorian Army ordered by the then president Leon Febres Cordero 17 Due to the death in 1986 of its leader Arturo Jarrin arrests and the death of several other members in the same year as a result of the actions carried out by the security forces of the Ecuadorian State AVC lost strength and was practically eliminated 15 17 18 According to the book The remnant of AVC it formally handed over its weapons in 1991 The balance of the AVC campaign between 1983 and 1988 was 16 AVC members six members of the M 19 14 police officers killed more than 20 injured 19 17 18 20 Contents 1 Background 2 Conformation 3 Assaults 4 History 4 1 Robbery of the sword of Eloy Alfaro 4 2 1983 1985 4 3 Escape from the prison 4 4 Nahim Isais kidnapping 4 4 1 Eduardo Granda kidnap attempt 4 5 1986 5 In popular culture 6 Notes 7 ReferencesBackground editAVC arose during an economic crisis 21 in the 1980s During the 1970s Ecuador experienced an annual economic growth rate of 8 1 21 due in part to high oil prices In 1982 the economy stagnated due to the fall in the price of oil and the simultaneous rise in interest rates in international markets The middle and upper classes were the ones who benefited the most from the oil boom but the popular classes were the ones who suffered the costs of the economic adjustment when the boom ended 22 Beginning with President Osvaldo Hurtado 1981 1984 the government of Ecuador applied measures dictated by the International Monetary Fund IMF to restructure the economy These measures included reducing fiscal spending devaluing the local currency and raising prices 22 The Febres Cordero government 1984 1988 exacerbated the economic crisis With the lowest oil price ever recorded in 1986 23 24 His economic team was made up of three economists fully identified with the business sector Carlos Julio Emanuel Francisco Swett and Alberto Dahik 25 They devalued the Sucre promoting agricultural exports and favoring economic groups At the same time they eliminated price controls and reduced the gasoline subsidy increasing the price of gasoline by 70 percent 25 The impact of the crisis on the popular sectors increased unemployment and the inflation and reduced consumption 22 The crisis was felt particularly in the poor sectors of the cities with an average fall in real urban income of 8 7 percent per year from 1981 to 1989 the most large among Latin American countries 22 Conformation editAVC was formed mainly by middle class students with an urban guerrilla focus It formed part of other revolutionary organizations such as the Movimiento de Izquierda Revolucionaria MIR The MIR had student leaders such as Fausto Basantes and Ricardo Merino of the Mejia National Institute of Quito 26 Arturo Jarrin and Hamet Vasconez from La Salle College of Quito currently La Salle Conocoto Juan Cuvi and Juan Carlos Acosta from American College of Quito Edgar Frias from the Jose Joaquin de Olmedo School in Guayaquil There were also alumni from the Colegio Nacional Juan Pio Montufar Benalcazar and Cardenal Spellman schools in Quito 27 Arturo Jarrin entered the Central University of Ecuador in Quito to study sociology leaving it during his fourth year after participating in popular organization activities in the Ciudadela Ferroviaria de Quito he joined AVC becoming the leader of the organization being elected at The First AVC National Conference held in Esmeraldas in February 1983 attended by around 60 guerrillas 27 In it the Central Command formed by three people including Jarrin Prior to this in January Jarrin and other guerrillas assaulted the Banco de Fomento AVC called all bank robberies financial recoveries which were the organization s primary means of financial support 26 Assaults editThe following is a partial list of armed robberies of banking institutions carried out by AVC members with the respective amounts stolen The amounts in US dollars are approximate with the price of the year in which they occurred 28 Date City Bank Branch Amount USD July 1983 Quito Multi exchange agency Headquarters 16 000March 1984 Quito Multi exchange agency Headquarters 9 000June 1984 Quito Banco del Pacifico La Villafora 43 000January 1985 Guayaquil Banco de Descuento Stock truck 32 000April 1985 Guayaquil Hollandsche Bank Unie Guayaquil branch 13 000May 1985 Guayaquil Banco Continental Guayaquil Branch 4 000June 1985 Quito Banco Consolidado El Labrador agency 18 000July 1985 Guayaquil Banco La Previsora Branch No 7 14 020History editThe group was initially formed some time in the 1970s but was not militarily active for the first several years of its existence 13 An avowedly leftist but non Marxist organisation they identified with the Democratic Left coalition 13 AVC first received national attention in 1983 when it broke into a museum and stole swords which had been used by Eloy Alfaro Some of the group s leaders were thought to be affiliated with Cuba Libya and Nicaragua and the group itself was linked to militant groups from other Latin American countries such as the M 19 14 and the Tupac Amaru Revolutionary Movement establishing a joint operations group called America Battalion with these two groups 13 From 1986 to 1987 AVC carried out several kidnappings robbed banks and a factory took over a number of radio stations in order to broadcast their manifesto and killed four police officers while retrieving a group member from police custody 14 In response to this activity the government began carrying out raids against the group The group s leader Arturo Jarrin was killed during a shootout with government forces in October 1986 13 By 1987 a large number of AVC s leaders and members had either been killed or arrested 14 In 1989 the government of Ecuador reached an agreement with AVC with the group agreeing to end its violence 2 14 In 1991 the group officially reformed as a legitimate political party One year later eight group members made an illegal but non violent entry into the British Embassy in Quito demanding the release of a group leader who was then imprisoned by the Ecuadorian government Robbery of the sword of Eloy Alfaro edit nbsp Members of the guerrilla Alfaro Vive Carajo pose next to the Eloy Alfaro s sword The first operation to receive extensive media coverage was the theft of the swords of Eloy Alfaro and Pedro Jose Montero from the Municipal Museum of Guayaquil on August 11 28 In January 2012 Rosa Mireya Cardenas who served as Secretary of Peoples 29 as a delegate of former AVC members she returned the swords to the then President of Ecuador Rafael Correa 30 31 1983 1985 edit Since the beginning of 1983 the AVC carried out a large number of operations which included actions such as bank robberies and graffiti seeking in this way to achieve loudness in the media which according to the AVC were controlled by the right 12 The first National Conference is held between February 12 and 14 1983 in Tonsupa Esmeraldas where the Eloy Alfaro People s Revolutionary Forces are constituted under the Slogan Alfaro Lives Dammit 32 On March 11 an attempt was made to assault the payer of Casa Baca Quito as a result of which Ricardo Merino and Vicente Lopez were arrested 33 On July 8 the Bust of Eloy Alfaro was stolen from the headquarters of the Supreme Liberal Junta in Quito 33 On September 22 at the Pululahua resort Pichincha 20 Jarrin Mireya Cardenas and Edgar Frias held a press conference in which they announced the existence of the organization 34 On November 2 the facilities of the radio stations Noticia La Fabulosa and Universal de Guayaquil were seized to condemn the intervention of United States in Nicaragua 20 At the end of 1983 Jarrin and about twenty guerrillas traveled to Libya to receive military training in one of the camps sponsored by Muamar el Gaddafi 35 Basantes and Frias temporarily assumed control of AVC In October during training near Esmeraldas Basantes and Cardenas were arrested for illegal possession of weapons In April 1984 after the return of Jarrin from Libya and the release of Basantes from prison the members of the AVC met and elected a Central Command made up of Jarrin Basantes and Frias 34 20 On May 4 the AVC occupied the offices of the Ecuadorian News Agency ANE in Guayaquil to send a message against Leon Febres Cordero then a candidate for the presidency of Ecuador and in support of Rodrigo Borja 34 On May 29 AVC militants abandoned pamphlets and detonated a low power explosive in the Metropolitan Cathedral of Quito 36 On June 12 the brothers Ricardo and Lilian Jarrin both disguised as religious assaulted the Banco de los Andes in Quito 20 On June 14 Jarrin along with half a dozen guerrillas assaulted the Banco del Pacifico also in Quito 34 After the robbery Jarrin and other guerrillas took refuge in the house of Consuelo Benavides a worker at the Ministry of Industries and an AVC sympathizer The police captured and tortured them 35 After the arrest of his sister and the threat of arrest of their parents by the police Jarrin confessed his identity his membership of the AVC and his participation in the robbery of Banco del Pacifico 37 Benavides for her part remained detained for months accused of illicit association 37 She was released on April 14 1985 after which she contacted the AVC in a rural area of Esmeraldas 35 38 On August 10 the day that Febres Cordero assumed the presidency of Ecuador the AVC took over several radio stations to announce its opposition to the incoming government 34 In December the AVC stole toys from a Quito factory and then distributed them among the residents of the poor neighborhoods of the city At the end of that month Hamet Vasconez who had been in El Salvador arrived in Ecuador and joined the AVC Central Command replacing Jarrin who was detained in the Garcia Moreno Prison in Quito 34 Months later on November 1 they seized the newspaper Hoy and forced to include in its edition two pages with information about the group 39 On November 8 they kidnapped a reporter from the newspaper Meridiano de Guayaquil to force an interview with Fausto Basantes Borja 20 On January 2 1985 they assaulted an armored vehicle of the Banco de Descuento in Guayaquil resulting in the death of a guerrilla Jorge Lima Trujillo and the arrest of another 20 On March 12 they attacked the weapons warehouse of the National Police at the headquarters of the Central de Radiopatrullas Seven guerrillas dressed as policemen one with lieutenant s insignia overpowered the five policemen on duty cut the telephone lines disconnected the radio system 40 stealing 631 38 caliber revolvers 40 carbines and several boxes of bullets 28 40 Days later the police found part of the weapons in a vacant lot 34 In April Hamet Vasconez was arrested and his position in the AVC Central Command was taken over by Pedro Moncada 35 Colombian M 19 guerrilla member Fernando Carmona was also detained 20 On April 29 of the same year the director of the now defunct Jose Franco Piedra Institute for Agrarian Reform and Colonization was kidnapped In an anonymous call the Alfaro Vive group claimed responsibility for the kidnapping 41 42 On May 10 they seized radio station Iris from Esmeraldas to broadcast an AVC proclamation 20 On May 21 they assaulted the Continental Bank of Guayaquil 20 On May 24 they took over the stations Z 1 11 Q and Radio Uno from Guayaquil 20 On May 29 they took over Radio Continente 20 On August 2 they assaulted a Filanbanco armored vehicle in Guayaquil where Enrique Mejia and Joel Vargas were arrested 20 On August 9 they assaulted a PRONACA factory on the road to El Quinche where they were arrested three members 20 On August 30 during a police operation in the Alborada citadel in Guayaquil a member died and four others were arrested 43 On October 16 they seized the embassy of Mexico in response to the rupture of their diplomatic relations with Nicaragua 20 The same seized Radio Vision to force them to conduct an interview with Arturo Jarrin 20 On October 25 they assaulted the Citibank agency in Quito disguised as nuns and lottery sellers 20 On December 7 they attacked an ENPROVIT warehouse in Duran 20 Escape from the prison edit At dawn on April 28 the AVC launched an operation to free Jarrin and Vasconez from Penal Garcia Moreno From a nearby commercial premises they dug a tunnel through which Jarrin Vasconez and two other members of the AVC escaped taking advantage of the guards shift change The tunnel ended in the courtyard of the Prison where the members of the AVC carried out exercises The construction of the tunnel was supervised by Marco Troya a former miner 35 38 Nahim Isais kidnapping edit The first kidnapping staged by AVC occurred in August 1985 when Nahim Isaias owner of Filanbanco was kidnapped for 26 days dying in the operation that tried to free him 44 45 The AVC wanted 5 million dollars for his ransom 46 with whom he planned to train guerrillas together with the Colombian M 19 and form a rural guerrilla in Ecuador A secondary objective was to make a political statement being part of the Ecuadorian banking and commercial oligarchy Thinking that the government would not put Isaias s life at risk and they would negotiate a financial bailout 16 Juan Cuvi Juan Carlos Acosta and Colombian guerrillas from the M 19 followed Isaias activities for months until they found a weakness in his security measures On August 7 they executed his plan when Isaias arrived at his country house known as Las Alturas 8 kilometers from Guayaquil on the road to Daule 16 47 Their plan was to take him to a safe house in Manta After the kidnapping the guerrillas left Isaias house in two cars one carried the kidnapped with guerrillas and the other Juan Cuvi and Juan Carlos Acosta Cuvi and Acosta s vehicle stopped at a gas station in Nobol where a police unit patrolling the area arrested them The guerrillas from the second vehicle exchanged fire with the police and fled to Guayaquil where they had to take Isaias to a house in the La Chala neighborhood 16 Both Cuvi and Acosta were tortured by the police and by members of military intelligence Acosta died on August 28 in a hospital after being severely tortured 48 Acosta was reportedly denied medical attention until his family intervened his father was a former foreign minister 48 according to the official version he was injured during his detention after he shot members of the police The President of the Republic assured that he had personally intervened in the case in order to save his life 49 According to his mother Laura Coloma de Acosta who visited him in the hospital earlier his body was covered in bruises and his testicles were mangled 48 Isaias remained kidnapped in the house in the La Chala neighborhood until August 31 when the police surrounded the house To free him a ransom of 10 million and a plane to leave Ecuador were demanded 50 In accordance with the state policy of not negotiating with terrorists on September 2 at 03 26 45 the Anti Terrorist Unit of the Special Forces Brigade of the Ecuadorian Army was ordered to carry out a rescue operation 17 According to the government members of the Isaias family were present when the operation was ordered 51 As a result both Isaiah and his kidnappers died 52 The failure of this operation collapsed the AVC s first attempt to generate an economic base 53 Eduardo Granda kidnap attempt edit On December 18 20 the AVC unsuccessfully tries to kidnap Eduardo Granda heir to the family then owner of the television channel Teleamazonas the plan was to capture him before entering his home in the north of Quito but he defended himself with a gun wounding a woman guerrilla who would be captured in a hospital where his wound was treated 54 34 1986 edit During 1986 the actions carried out by the government almost completely neutralized the AVC seeking mainly to eliminate its leaders Jarrin Basantes and Vasconez 26 The government had the support of an informant within the AVC Fernando Flores who agreed to help in exchange for a US visa 26 He helped police set up an ambush on Avenida de la Prensa in Quito in which Basantes was killed on January 4 35 55 On January 31 they tried to blow up towers 3 and 4 of the National Interconnected System on the Panamericana Sur km 11 12 with dynamite charges 20 On February 4 a pamphlet bomb was detonated in the IESS hall in Quito 20 In popular culture editThe group is the subject of a 2007 documentary film titled Alfaro vive carajo Del Sueno Al Caos 56 The post hardcore rock group At The Drive In has an EP named Alfaro Vive Carajo Notes edit Phil Gunson Andrew Thompson Greg Chamberlain 1989 The Dictionary of Contemporary Politics in South America Routledge p 3 a b c Party Politics in the 1980s countrystudies us M 19 capacito a alfaristas y participo en sus asaltos El Universo in Spanish 2010 06 19 Retrieved 2019 04 06 ANNUAL REPORT OF THE INTER AMERICAN COMMISSION ON HUMAN RIGHTS 1988 1989 Retrieved 2015 11 25 Alfaro Vive Carajo AVC Terrorist Groups TRAC www trackingterrorism org Retrieved 2015 11 25 Terrorist Group Profiles DIANE Publishing 1989 08 01 ISBN 9781568068640 Retrieved 2015 11 25 NCJRS Abstract National Criminal Justice Reference Service Retrieved 2015 11 25 El Universo Un capitulo de la historia del pais con dos visiones opuestas 20 junio de 2010 Arturo Jarrin fue drogado en Panama y traido a Ecuador en estado de inconsciencia El Telegrafo1 de julio de 2016 El Telegrafo20 de junio de 2010 El Comercio Fiscalia acusara a 13 personas por caso Arturo Jarrin 28 de abril de 2016 Comision de Defensa Juridico Institucional de la Policia Nacional 2010 TERRORISMO Y SUBVERSIoN Por Manuel Sarmiento Mera Con Varios creditos autorales CAPITULO I La busqueda de la verdad 19 Una verdad profesional 22 La gran verdad institucional 22 Acciones delictivas cometidas en el Ecuador desde 1976 por los grupos subversivos Alfaro Vive Carajo AVC Montoneras Patria Libre MPL y el Movimiento Colombiano 19 de abril M 19 1984 DIVERSIDAD DE ACCIONES DELINCUENCIALES El 12 de junio se produce el asalto al Banco de los Andes agencia Kennedy en Quito Los asaltantes Ricardo Arturo Jarrin Jarrin y Lilian Beatriz Jarrin Jarrin miembros del grupo AVC con habitos religiosos cometieron el atraco Toma el mando Arturo Jarrin adoptando el apelativo dado por la prensa todos esos anos se funda el grupo Alfaro Vive hasta su disolucion en el gobierno posterior Borja a b Alfaro Vive Carajo La guerrilla que conmociono a Ecuador Resumen Latinoamericano in European Spanish Retrieved 2018 06 05 a b c d e f g Phil Gunson Andrew Thompson amp Greg Chamberlain The Dictionary of Contemporary Politics of South America London Routledge 1990 p 3 a b c d e f Ecuador Internal Security country data com a b Anderson Sean Sloan Stephen 2009 Historical Dictionary of Terrorism Lanham Maryland The Scarecrow Press p 14 ISBN 9780810863118 a b c d Isabel Davalos director 2007 Alfaro vive carajo del sueno al caos Ecuador Cabeza Hueca Producciones 35 minutes in a b c d Report of the Truth Commission Volume 3 Case reports Period 1984 1988 Comision de la Verdad 2010 ISBN 9789978928493 a b Informe de la Comision de la Verdad Tomo 1 Violaciones de los Derechos Humanos Comision de la Verdad 2010 ISBN 9789978928479 Antonio Rodriguez Jaramillo 2014 Memoria de las Espadas Alfaro Vive Carajo los argumentos de la historia PDF in Spanish IAEN p 18 a b c d e f g h i j k l m n o p q r s t u Comision de Defensa Juridico Institucional de la Policia Nacional TERRORISMO Y SUBVERSIoN La verdad que no se ha dicho PDF in Spanish Archived from the original PDF on 2015 09 23 Retrieved 2015 07 02 a b Economia politica en la democracia ecuatoriana Diario El Mercurio Cuenca Ecuador in European Spanish 2011 01 19 Archived from the original on 2017 05 10 Retrieved 2017 07 04 a b c d Weiss Wendy 1997 Debt and Devaluation The Burden on Ecuador s Popular Class Latin American Perspectives 24 4 9 33 doi 10 1177 0094582X9702400402 S2CID 153913444 CIA 1986 04 23 ECUADOR Febres Cordero Administration and its Challenges PDF Archived from the original PDF on January 23 2017 Leon Febres Cordero Confrontational President of Ecuador The Independent 2008 12 17 Retrieved 2017 07 12 a b Catherine M Conaghan James M Malloy Luis A Abugattas 1990 Business and the Boys The Politics of Neoliberalism in the Central Andes Latin American Research Review 25 2 3 30 doi 10 1017 S0023879100023360 S2CID 252931114 a b c d Teran Juan Apuntes para la historia de AVC PDF Editorial Ultimo Recurso Archived from the original PDF on 2014 02 27 Retrieved 2009 01 07 a b Jijon 1986 11 07 Alfaro vive carajo del robo de la espada a la sangre de Jarrin Vistazo pp 4 10 a b c Zambranod Alfonso 1990 Ran Gazit La sombra tras el poder Guayaquil EDINO The swords arouse differences in the former AVC El Comercio Retrieved 2016 03 29 Swords of Alfaro and Montero were delivered to President Correa El Telegrafo in Spanish 2012 01 28 Retrieved 2017 07 20 Patrimonio certifies that Alfaro s sword is genuine El Telegrafo 2012 01 31 Rodriguez Jaramillo Antonio 2014 Memoria de las Espadas Alfaro Vive Carajo los argumentos de la historia PDF in Spanish IAEN p 41 a b Rodriguez Jaramillo Antonio 2014 Memoria de las Espadas Alfaro Vive Carajo los argumentos de la historia PDF in Spanish IAEN p 133 a b c d e f g h Teran Juan Apuntes para la historia de AVC PDF Editorial Ultimo Recurso Archived from the original PDF on 2014 02 27 Retrieved 2009 01 07 a b c d e f Rodolfo Perez Biografia de Pedro Moncada Awad Diccionario Biografico del Ecuador in Spanish Archived from the original on 2009 02 01 Retrieved 2009 01 07 GTD ID 198405290001 Global Terrorism Database Retrieved 2023 01 15 a b Jarrin Ricardo 1991 El cementerio de los vivos Ediciones C T E Quito a href Template Cite book html title Template Cite book cite book a CS1 maint location missing publisher link a b Jarrin Juan luis 2004 Introduccion a El cementerio de los vivos Tercera Edicion Comite Ecuatoriano contra la Impunidad Quito a href Template Cite book html title Template Cite book cite book a CS1 maint location missing publisher link Un capitulo de la historia del pais con dos visiones opuestas El Universo in Spanish 20 June 2010 Retrieved 2015 11 28 a b Un detenido y ninguna pista en asalto a recinto policial El Universo 1985 03 15 Un Dia como hoy El Universo May 2010 Retrieved 2023 01 15 GTD ID 198504290008 Global Terrorism Database Retrieved 2023 01 15 Tamayo G Eduardo Gobierno de Leon Febres Cordero 1984 1988 PDF Resistencias al Autoritarismo Retrieved 2017 07 27 31 anos del asesinato de Nahim Isaias Barquet Ecuavisa in Spanish 2016 09 02 Retrieved 2017 12 12 a b 2 de septiembre de 1985 El Universo in Spanish 2016 08 30 Retrieved 2017 12 12 Un capitulo de la historia del pais con dos visiones opuestas El Universo in Spanish 20 June 2010 Retrieved 2015 11 28 Ecuadorian Troops Trap Kidnappers of Banker The New York Times 1985 09 01 a b c Fellner Jamie Wendy Gimbel Diego Garcia Sayan 1988 Human Rights in Ecuador New York Americas Watch Committee and Andean Commission of Jurists ISBN 0938579592 Documentary Alfaro Lives from the dream to CHAOS 8 LibreRed 2009 04 30 Retrieved 2017 07 14 via YouTube Rebels Hold Ecuadoran Banker The Washington Post 1985 09 01 Documental Alfaro Vive del sueno al CAOS 7 LibreRed 2009 05 16 Retrieved 2017 07 14 via YouTube Ecuadorian Banker Is Slain with Abductors The New York Times 1985 09 03 Antonio Rodriguez Jaramillo 2014 Memoria de las Espadas Alfaro Vive Carajo los argumentos de la historia PDF in Spanish IAEN p 60 Jijon Carlos 1986 01 10 Golpe mortal a Alfaro Vive Vistazo pp 10 13 Former AVC leadership takes root in legal life El Comercio 2005 10 08 Alfaro vive carajo del sueno al caos Isabel Davalos Ecuador 90 minutos Cero Latitud References edit Annual Report Of The Inter American Commission On Human Rights 1988 1989 Resolution No 14 89 Case 9641 Ecuador April 12 1989 Inter American Commission on Human Rights Alfaro Vive Carajo rechaza uso de nombre en video www hoy com ec 2007 08 11 Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Alfaro Vive Carajo amp oldid 1173247393, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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