FBI opens first Ecuador office in fight against drug trafficking

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QUITO, March 11 (Reuters) - The United States has opened its ​first Federal Bureau of Investigation (FBI) office ‌in Ecuador, the U.S. Embassy in Quito said on Wednesday.

The office will aim to ​work with Ecuadorean officials to fight the trafficking ​of drugs and weapons, along with ⁠money laundering and the financing of ​terrorism, the embassy said in a social ​media post.

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Ecuador’s Interior Minister John Reimber told reporters that collaboration with the FBI office would ​start immediately, after prior joint efforts ​with the U.S.

“What has changed is that we have ‌FBI ⁠agents permanently in Ecuador working with a national police unit that has been set up so that they can ​work together,” ​he said.

⁠Ecuadorean President Daniel Noboa has made a military crackdown on ​organized crime a cornerstone of ​his ⁠administration. Last week his government staged a joint operation with U.S. officials to ⁠target ​drug trafficking operations in ​the South American country.

Reporting by Alexandra Valencia, Writing by ​Daina Beth Solomon; Editing by Brendan O’Boyle

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