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Ecuadoreans vote for new assembly Ecuador votes for new assembly
(about 2 hours later)
The people of Ecuador are choosing a new constituent assembly designed radically to alter the way the country is run. The people of Ecuador are choosing a new constituent assembly designed to radically alter how the country is run.
President Rafael Correa wants the 130-member body to dissolve Congress and cut the powers of the traditional political parties. President Rafael Correa wants the 130-member body to dissolve Congress and cut traditional parties' powers.
He says the parties have run the country badly. Mr Correa, who came to power in January, says the assembly will bring politics back to the people after years of corrupt and inept governments.
But correspondents say a wide array of candidates and a complicated electoral process has confused many voters. But opposition groups say the move will only concentrate more power in the hands of the president.
Mr Correa, who came to power in January, says the constituent assembly will bring politics back to the people after years of corrupt and inept governments. They accuse him of wanting to turn Ecuador into a socialist state.
But the BBC South American correspondent Daniel Schweimler says more than 3,200 candidates and a complex voting system has left many voters undecided or simply confused. Ecuador has thrown out three previous presidents in the last 10 years, and successive governments have been roundly criticised.
'Put aside hate'
The president's party expects to win more than two-thirds of the vote necessary to implement the changes he has promised.
This is the reaffirmation of a change in the times, the light at the end of the tunnel President Rafael Correa
In a speech broadcast at the start of voting, Mr Correa called for a strong mandate.
"Put aside hate and rancour and join in the construction of a new country," he said.
"This is the reaffirmation of a change in the times, the light at the end of the tunnel."
But the BBC's South America correspondent Daniel Schweimler says more than 3,200 candidates and a complex voting system has left many voters undecided or simply confused.
Among the candidates are several former beauty queens, a long-haired monk who walks the streets urging voters to take from the rich and a masked crime fighter known as The Punisher who says his face is covered because he is allergic to corruption.Among the candidates are several former beauty queens, a long-haired monk who walks the streets urging voters to take from the rich and a masked crime fighter known as The Punisher who says his face is covered because he is allergic to corruption.
There are evangelical Christians and Marxists, offering an array of measures, including a return of the death penalty and nationalising the country's oil industry.There are evangelical Christians and Marxists, offering an array of measures, including a return of the death penalty and nationalising the country's oil industry.
Opposition parties in Ecuador say the vote is simply a way for Mr Correa to concentrate more power in his own hands.
The president's party expected to win more than two-thirds of the vote necessary to implement the changes he has promised the Ecuadorean people.