World | Other World Stories
Quito sues Bogota over anti-drug spraying on border
Ecuador said on Monday it had sued Colombia in international court over drug crop fumigation along its border in a move that could stoke tensions as the neighbours spar over a Colombian raid into Ecuador's territory.
Quito: Ecuador said on Monday it had sued Colombia in international court over drug crop fumigation along its border in a move that could stoke tensions as the neighbours spar over a Colombian raid into Ecuador's territory.
A March 1 Colombian attack on a Colombian rebel camp in Ecuador killed more than 20 people including a top guerrilla leader. It also frayed diplomatic ties and briefly raised the threat of war after Ecuador and Venezuela moved troops to their borders with Colombia.
Ecuador's legal claim, which could take years to be resolved in the International Court of Justice in The Hague, will likely delay a swift solution to the dispute. Bogota rejected Ecuador's charge.
In the latest border incident, Colombia said, an Ecuadorean army helicopter violated Colombia's airspace on Sunday and was forced to land, but then took off and flew back into Ecuador.
Ecuador apologised for the violation later on Monday and said its helicopter had entered Colombian airspace by mistake.
Tensions between the Andean neighbours remained high after Quito accused Bogota of waging a smear campaign to tie Ecuadorean President Rafael Correa to the leftist rebels.
Sovereignty
"Ecuador asks the court to declare Colombia's air fumigation a violation of Ecuador's sovereignty," Foreign Minister Maria Salvador told reporters in Quito.
The minister demanded Colombia halt all fumigation near the border and pay the government compensation for more than seven years of spraying to destroy illicit coca crops used to make cocaine.
In a presidential statement, Colombia rejected the claim and said it had already agreed not to spray along the frontier and instead use manual eradication to attack coca crops, which it said were mainly controlled by leftist FARC guerrillas.
More from Other World Stories
More from World
News Editor's choice
-
6,000 cups and counting: Addicted to that tea
This cafeteria in Al Mamzar attracts thousands of customers daily, including the rich and not so rich
-
Swimming pool horror: Twins hospitalised
Twins rushed to hospital after collapsing from chlorine inhalation at swimming pool in their villa
-
Play your cards right with credit card interest
UAE Central Bank plans to cap interest rates, but are you paying thirty-five per cent now?

