Can talks bring an end to weeks of violent protests in Ecuador?
Video Duration 25 minutes 00 seconds
Indigenous groups are demanding lower food and fuel prices.
Ecuador’s government is holding talks with representatives of its Indigenous community.
The dialogue aims to end weeks of protest against a sharp increase in fuel and food prices that have affected Indigenous people the most.
After previously accusing strikers of laying the groundwork for a coup, President Guillermo Lasso has lifted a state of emergency and made some concessions.
But demonstrators say he has not gone far enough.
Can negotiations curb their anger? Will it help solve the country’s economic crisis?
Presenter: Sohail Rahman
Guests:
Adrian Perez Salazar – Lawyer and political analyst
Manuela Picq – Professor at Universidad San Francisco de Quito and Amherst College in Cuenca, Ecuador
Danny Shaw – Professor of Latin American and Caribbean studies at City University of New York