GUAYAQUIL, Ecuador (AP) — Ecuadorian police on Tuesday found an undisclosed number of bodies in an area close to a military base, officials said, and were investigating whether the bodies could be of some of the four children who were last seen taken by men in military uniform earlier this month.
The case of the children, aged 11 to 15, who went missing on Dec. 8, has profoundly shaken Ecuador, with rights groups and the public demanding information about their whereabouts and asking that the case be investigated as a forced disappearance.
Under pressure for answers, authorities said 16 soldiers had been placed in custody and were being investigated for the disappearance of the minors.
Also Tuesday, prosecutors said they are looking to charge some members of the military with forced disappearance in the case. They did not provide further details and no charges have yet been raised.
According to a police official who spoke with The Associated Press, the bodies discovered Tuesday were found in a mangrove area near the western city of Taura, where the military base is located.
The official, speaking on condition of anonymity to discuss the case, did not say how many bodies were found but added that they are now being analyzed to determine whether they were the kids.
Two other officials following the case, who also asked not to be identified because they were not authorized to speak with the media, told the AP that the bodies were charred and showed signs of violence.
President Daniel Noboa, whose government has used the military to fight soaring crime as part of a security strategy with which he seeks to be reelected in February, has promised that his administration would not cover up for anyone in the disappearance.
The children went missing in the coastal city of Guayaquil, where dozens of people demonstrated Monday demanding accountability and answers.
Defense Minister Gian Carlo Loffredo on Tuesday ordered the army to keep 16 soldiers in custody pending investigation, according to a statement posted on X.
The bodies were found near the Taura Military Base, on the outskirts of Guayaquil, where the Ecuadorian Air Force is headquartered, according to the police official. The 16 troops in custody where assigned to that base.
Surveillance videos emerged this week showing men in military uniform grabbing two boys and driving off with them. The two are believed to be among four children who disappeared that night.
Loffredo on Monday confirmed the four were detained in the area where the footage was taken.
The videos, seen by the AP, show a group of children running, men in uniform, two children being placed in the back of a pick-up truck and the vehicle moving through the streets of Guayaquil. The footage appears to back up the account of Luis Arroyo, the father of two of the missing children.
Arroyo earlier told local media taht his children were on their way home after playing soccer when two vehicles carrying people in military uniforms arrived in the area. The children, he said, were chased and four were caught and driven away.
It wasn’t clear how he knew this.
Loffredo, the defense minister, told reporters on Monday that, according to a military report, the children were detained by a patrol with 16 agents who “observed eight people who were allegedly robbing a woman.”
He said the military later released the minors and did not hand them over to the police. The footage reviewed by the AP does not show the alleged robbery.
People embrace during a protest in front of the prosecutor's office following the disappearance in Guayaquil of four children who were last seen running away from a military convoy, in Quito, Ecuador, Monday, Dec. 23, 2024. (AP Photo/Carlos Noriega)
People embrace during a protest in front of the prosecutor's office following the disappearance in Guayaquil of four children who were last seen running away from a military convoy, in Quito, Ecuador, Monday, Dec. 23, 2024. (AP Photo/Carlos Noriega)
BELGRADE, Serbia (AP) — Serbia's striking university students on Wednesday rallied outside the chief prosecutor's office to demand justice over a concrete canopy collapse that killed 15 people last month in the country's north.
More than 1,000 students symbolically left letters on the doorstep of the public prosecutor's office, telling chief prosecutor Zagorka Dolovac that "students expect you to fight for law and justice, without political abuse or corruption.”
Dolovac's office later responded with a statement inviting a student delegation to a meeting.
Serbia's universities have been blockaded for weeks as part of a wider movement demanding accountability over the Nov. 1 tragedy in Novi Sad when a huge concrete construction at the railway station crashed onto the people below.
Many in Serbia blame the collapse on widespread corruption and sloppy work on the building renovation, one of a number of questionable infrastructure megaprojects involving Chinese state companies.
Prosecutors have arrested 13 people over the Novi Sad tragedy, including a government minister whose release later fueled public skepticism about the honesty of the investigation.
Striking students have received wide support in Serbia from their professors, farmers, actors and others. Tens of thousands joined a student-led protest in Belgrade on Sunday that also reflected wider discontent with populist President Aleksandar Vucic's rule.
Protesting students on Wednesday carried banners featuring red handprints — a protest symbol telling the authorities they have “blood on their hands.”
In an apparent attempt to defuse the student strikes, Vucic has been advertising what he describes as “favorable” loans for young people to purchase apartments.
The increasingly autocratic Serbian leader has faced accusations of curbing democratic freedoms despite formally pursuing European Union membership for the Balkan nation.
People stopping traffic, stand in silence during ongoing protests that erupted after a concrete canopy fell last month and killed 15 people in front of the government building in Belgrade, Serbia, Wednesday, Dec. 25, 2024. (AP Photo/Darko Vojinovic)
People stopping traffic, stand in silence during ongoing protests that erupted after a concrete canopy fell last month and killed 15 people in front of the government building in Belgrade, Serbia, Wednesday, Dec. 25, 2024. (AP Photo/Darko Vojinovic)
Students shout slogans during a protest protest that erupted after a concrete canopy fell last month and killed 15 people in front of the prosecutor's office in Belgrade, Serbia, Wednesday, Dec. 25, 2024. (AP Photo/Darko Vojinovic)
Students march during a protest protest that erupted after a concrete canopy fell last month and killed 15 people in Belgrade, Serbia, Wednesday, Dec. 25, 2024. (AP Photo/Darko Vojinovic)
Students carry banner reading: "Belgrade is the World again" during a protest protest that erupted after a concrete canopy fell last month and killed 15 people in Belgrade, Serbia, Wednesday, Dec. 25, 2024. (AP Photo/Darko Vojinovic)