Brazil Threatens Ecuador with Reprisal After It Refuses to Repay Loan

Rafael Correa The Brazilian government has recalled to Brazil capital BrasÀ­lia its ambassador from Ecuador over the Andean country's suspension of payments on a Brazilian loan worth at least US$ 320 million.

Ecuador filed an international lawsuit on Thursday, November 20, to suspend payments on the loan from Brazil's BNDES (National Bank for Economic and Social Development), alleging the terms are unlawful.

Correa, said on Saturday, November 22, that the diplomatic tension between his country and Brazil, started in Brasí­lia, and not in Quito. "If they want to convert a commercial-financial problem into a diplomatic incident, this is the exclusive responsibility of Brazil," said the Ecuadorian president.

Correa said that his country likes Brazil a lot and that there is no reason for a fight. He also claimed that Ecuador did not call off the payment, but simply appealed judicially against the debt. "We didn't refuse to pay, nor did we throw the contract in the trash can," he concluded.

Lula expressed his "profound displeasure" with his Ecuadorian colleague for taking the loan debt to an international arbitration.

Rafael Correa, the Ecuadorian president, has warned the country may not repay "illegitimate" debt, as oil export revenues have been hurt by falling prices and the global financial crisis.

Correa said the results of a year long audit of Ecuador's debt found indications that much of the country's US$ 10 billion foreign debt could be illegitimate.

Celso Amorim, the Brazilian foreign minister, has previously warned that if Ecuador defaults on a loan from the BNDES it would end bilateral trade between the two nations.

"Whoever knows diplomatic practices knows exactly what this [recall] means," Amorim said in São Paulo on Friday, November 21.

"We have wide co-operation with Ecuador and we will examine this co-operation in light of these decisions."

Wall Street credit rating agencies have said Ecuador is among the least credit worthy countries in Latin America.

The country defaulted on US$ 5.8 billion in bonds in 1999, also amid a sharp fall in oil prices.

Mercopress/Bzz 

Tags:

You May Also Like

Business, Culture and Other Ties That Bind Brazil and Florida

Miami’s Broward Center for the Performing Arts announces its two-day Business Forum to be held ...

Brazil, India and South Africa Mean Business

Last weekend the Chancellors of Brazil, India, and South Africa, the group known as ...

Chile’s First Woman President in Busy Official Visit to Brazil

The President of Chile, Michelle Bachelet, is in an official state visit to Brazil. ...

How to Survive in the Jungle of Brazil Without Cash

Friends unexpectedly received from me a postcard from Manaus, Brazil, of a scantily dressed ...

Forced to Import Used Tires from Europe Brazil Appeals to WTO

Brazil continues its struggle to keep imported used tires out of the country. Representatives ...

Ethanol plant in São Paulo, Brazil

Brazil Receives the World for Summit on Ethanol and Alternative Energy

São Paulo is currently the global capital of ethanol. The statement was made by ...

Brazilian Women Victims of Violence Urged to Denounce Their Assailants

“Do not report tomorrow the abuse you suffer today.” This is the motto adopted ...

General’s Suicide in Haiti, Won’t Deter Brazil, Says Army Chief

Brazilian army commander in chief, general Francisco Roberto de Albuquerque, declared, Thursday, January 12, ...

Suppose Lula Is Impeached. It Won’t Be a Nice Picture in Brazil.

What everybody in Brazil is talking about, this week, is not  the explanation given ...

Brazil Kisses the IMF Goodbye

Brazil’s secretary of the Federal Treasury reaffirmed what the Finance Minister had already announced: ...