Investors worried "We're making history! Onward!" President Correa urged a crowd of supporters in his coastal hometown of Guayaquil. "This is confirmation of the citizen's revolution we're offering." Mr. Correa, a 45-year-old US-trained economist, has said he is fulfilling the promises he made when he won elections nearly two years ago. He was elected following years of turmoil in Ecuador, which saw angry crowds throw three presidents from office in the previous 10 years.
The articles in the proposed constitution include plans to tighten control of vital industries such as oil and mining. Some foreign loans could be declared illegitimate so they would not have to be paid and there are plans to give free health care to older citizens. President Correa is offering more say in the running of the country to women, the poor and Ecuador's large indigenous community. He says he is trying to reduce the power and influence of the business and land-owning elite, which has always run the country. Not surprisingly, there has been opposition to the proposals, says our South America correspondent. Some say Mr. Correa is a puppet of the Venezuelan President, Hugo Chavez, and that the state will interfere unnecessarily in business affairs. Foreign investors, especially in Ecuador's oil industry, are concerned that the new laws will reduce their profits and that the country will not pay its foreign debts, he says. The US, he adds, will be worried about what many there see as another move to the left in Latin America. In his speech after the referendum, Mr. Correa urged those who voted against the new constitution to put aside their differences. "Let them acknowledge defeat and let's strike out together in the new direction the great majority of Ecuadorians, as well as all Latin America, are setting: a society with more justice, much more equality and without so much... misery." (Information from BBC News)
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