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| President Correa has long been at odds with the country's private media |
Ecuador's
President Rafael Correa has pardoned the owners and a journalist at El Universo
newspaper who faced jail terms and $40m (£25m) in damages for libelling him.
President
Correa, in a statement transmitted live, said he and his government had been
portrayed as the persecutors of journalists.
But his
sole aim in bringing the case had been to seek the truth, he said.
The libel
case focused attention on the freedom of Ecuador's media.
"I've
decided to... pardon the accused and grant them remission of the sentences they
rightly received," Mr Correa said in his statement.
The three
owners of El Universo - brothers Carlos, Cesar and Nicolas Perez - and
columnist Emilio Palacio were found guilty of libelling the president.
They were
each given three-year prison terms and had multi-million dollar damages and
fines awarded against them.
Mr Correa
brought the lawsuit after an article in El Universo questioned an army raid to
rescue him from a violent protest by striking police officers in September
2010.
Carlos
Perez is currently sheltering in the Panamanian embassy in the capital Quito,
while the other three are blieved to be out of the country.
"I
never wanted this trial. I never wanted anyone arrested," Mr Correa said.
Editorials
Human
rights and press freedom groups condemned the severity of the sentences imposed
on El Universo.
But Mr
Correa said his battle with Ecuador's private media was a fight for justice.
"They
have been talking about a dictatorship and they were right," he said.
It was the
"dictatorship of the media".
The trial
had shown people that they could overcome their fear of a "corrupt"
press, Mr Correa said.
In his
statement, Mr Correa also said he was dropping a libel case against two other
journalists who had written a book detailing the government contracts granted
to his brother Fabio.
Fabio
Correa has repeatedly said they were the result of public tenders.
President Correa,
in office since 2007, has long been at odds with the country's media. He
accuses them of spreading lies in an attempt to undermine his government.
The libel
case against El Universo sparked a torrent of international criticism,
including hard-hitting editorials in several US newspapers.

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