<br><div><div><br></div><div>Ecuadorian University Student Federation President, Marcelo Rivera, jailed for over ten</div><div>months in the García Moreno prison, declared today that he was beginning an open-ended</div><div>
hunger strike, to pressure the government and the courts, in demand of his freedom.</div><div><br></div><div>The student leader decided to take this extreme measure to push for a favorable ruling from</div><div>the Third Division of the Criminal Trial Court, presided over by Dr. Gladys Terán Sierra,</div>
<div>during the trial scheduled for 22 October.</div><div><br></div><div>Rivera was with his university classmates and his party, the People’ s Democratic</div><div>Movement (MPD), when he began the strike, and declared that he wants his decision to</div>
<div>become an example for the organized groups in the country, to continue struggling even</div><div>harder against the arrogance and neoliberal policies pursued by the regime.</div><div><br></div><div>"I'm a political prisoner of Rafael Correa’ s government; and my case is an example of the</div>
<div>governmental authoritarianism that Ecuador is being put through, in particular peoples’</div><div>organizations and their leaders. My struggle is not isolated; it is part of the struggle of</div><div>workers, indigenous people, students, small merchants, teachers and other sectors that are</div>
<div>defending the democratic principles of the Constitution, and resisting the right-wing turn of</div><div>the regime," Rivera said.</div><div><br></div><div>It should be remembered that in the 9 September hearing, after three hours, the First</div>
<div>Division of the Provincial Court of Pichincha ruled that it was denying three motions from</div><div>Marcelo Rivera’ s defense, including substitution of the precautionary measure of pretrial</div><div>detention to enable the defendant to defend himself in freedom. The trial began, which,</div>
<div>unlike any other, has been quite speedy.</div><div><br></div><div>Rivera is charged with the offence of "terrorist assault against a public servant," categorized</div><div>in Article 164 of the Criminal Code, in the midst of proceedings full of contradictions,</div>
<div>where the rector of the Central University, Edgar Samaniego, has been the main plaintiff.</div><div><br></div><div>"While Correa seeks amnesty for corrupt people like Alberto Dahik, he jails people who</div><div>
have always fought corruption," concluded Rivera.</div></div>