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 Ecuadorean President
Lucio Gutierrez talks at Government Palace in Quito,
Ecuador, April 16, 2005. He lifted a state of emergency in the
capital on Saturday. (Xinhua/AFP
Photo) | QUITO, April 16
(Xinhuanet) -- Ecuadorian President Lucio Gutierrez lifted a state of emergency
in the capital on Saturday, as thousands of Ecuadorians took to the streets to
demand his resignation for declaring the ban and firing the Supreme Court.
"I have lifted the state of emergency and asked for
the maintenance of tranquillity and peace," the embattled president spoke over
national television.
"Little by little, tranquillity is returning to the
nation," hesaid.
Gutierrez, 48, declared the state of emergency late
Friday after three days of loud but peaceful protests demanding his ouster.
He also announced to dissolved the Supreme Court, for
the second time since December, saying the judges -- who were appointed in
December by his congressional allies in a process widely deemed unconstitutional
-- were the cause of three days of street protests in Quito.
Residents of the capital had defied the state of
emergency, taking to the streets by the thousands and banging pots and pans
across the city. Security forces did not move to stop the demonstration against
Gutierrez's decrees aimed at ending a crisisover the court crisis.
The court crisis was set in motion in November when
the former judges sided with opposition politicians in a failed effort to
impeach Gutierrez on corruption charges. Gutierrez then assembled a bloc of 52
lawmakers in the 100-seat unicameral Congress, which voted in December to remove
the judges.
When he first dissolved the high court in December, Gutierrez promised to set up a new system aimed at choosing impartial judges.But he failed to find a compromise with Congress, which rejected his call for a referendum on overhauling the courts. Enditem
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