QUITO, Ecuador - Ecuador's first female defense minister died Wednesday in a
collision of two helicopters that also killed her daughter and five members of
the military, officials said.
 Guadalupe Larriva, Ecuador's newly appointed Defense
Minister, speaks during a news conference after been named by
president-elect Rafael Correa, in this Dec. 27, 2006 file photo.
[AP]
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The wreck in the port city of
Manta killed Defense Minister Guadalupe Larriva, 50, her daughter Claudia Avila,
17, and five officials, Interior Secretary Gustavo Larrea confirmed.
In a televised interview, Vice President Lenin Moreno said the helicopters
were performing a night flight test "and in a bad maneuver it appears that the
blades collided and the helicopters fell to the ground."
The crash took place near the military base in Manta, 160 miles southeast of
the capital of Quito.
No top ranking commanders were on board the helicopters, Moreno said.
Pilot Celso Acosta and Coronel Marco Jurado were among the dead. The rest
were not immediately identified.
Larriva was appointed by President Rafael Correa and both took office on Jan.
15. In addition to being the first female defense chief, she also was the first
to have never served in the military.
In a short statement aired on Canal 1, Correa asked the Ecuadorean people "to
pray for Guadalupe, her daughter, the pilots, for her family members, for the
government of Ecuador."
Correa appointed seven women to his Cabinet, saying he wanted to promote
gender equality in his South American nation.
Larriva shook off concerns about resistance from the military to her
appointment. Before taking office, she said she expected more curiosity than
animosity from Ecuador's military brass "over whether a woman can lead in this
role."
Larrea announced the creation of a special investigative commission to look
into the cause of the crash.
A teacher by vocation, Larriva rose through her party's ranks and served in
congress.
She is survived by a daughter and son. Her husband, Rodrigo Avila, died eight
years ago.