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Riots and arson in Bolivia to protest election results giving president Morales a fourth consecutive term

Tuesday, October 22nd 2019 - 09:48 UTC
Full article 2 comments
A crowd burned the offices of the electoral body in the southern city of Sucre, and groups of Morales’ supporters and opponents clashed in a number of places. A crowd burned the offices of the electoral body in the southern city of Sucre, and groups of Morales’ supporters and opponents clashed in a number of places.
An OAS observer mission expressed concerns about the development and US State  Department accused Bolivian authorities of trying to subvert the vote An OAS observer mission expressed concerns about the development and US State Department accused Bolivian authorities of trying to subvert the vote
Bolivia’s electoral authority stopped announcing results at 7:45 p.m. Sunday, when Morales had a lead of 45.3% to 38.2% of Carlos Mesa Bolivia’s electoral authority stopped announcing results at 7:45 p.m. Sunday, when Morales had a lead of 45.3% to 38.2% of Carlos Mesa

Bolivia’s electoral authority announced on Monday night that President Evo Morales was close to avoiding a runoff in his re-election bid, touching off protests by the leader’s opponents already upset by a sudden halt in the release of the vote count.

 A crowd burned the offices of the electoral body in the southern city of Sucre, and groups of Morales’ supporters and opponents clashed in a number of places.

The president’s opponents suggested that officials were trying to help Morales avoid a runoff fight in which he could lose to a unified opposition, while an observer mission from the Organization of American States expressed concerns about the development.

A U.S. State Department accused Bolivian authorities of trying to subvert the vote.

Morales topped the eight other candidates in Sunday’s presidential election, but the last released results before Monday night showed him falling a few points short of the percentage needed to avoid the first runoff in his nearly 14 years in power.

Still, he claimed an outright victory late Sunday, saying the uncounted votes would be enough to give him a fourth term. He told supporters at the presidential palace that “the people again imposed their will.”

Bolivia’s top electoral authority stopped announcing new results at 7:45 p.m. Sunday — a point at which Morales had a lead of 45.3% to 38.2% over the second-place candidate, former President Carlos Mesa. On Monday night, the body renewed its preliminary count and said that with 95% of votes counted, Morales led 46.41% to Mesa’s 37.06%.

Under Bolivian law, Morales would need a 10-percentage point advantage over Mesa to avoid a runoff in December. The official final count is not due for seven days.

Mesa, who had warned earlier that there could be “manipulation of the vote to impede a second round” of voting, called on citizens and civic groups “to conduct a battle in defense of the vote.”

“They can’t take away democracy from us,” Mesa said at a gathering of his supporters in Santa Cruz, a stronghold of opposition to Morales.

The OAS observer mission issued a statement calling on electoral officials “to firmly defend the will of the Bolivian citizenry.”

“The OAS Mission expresses its deep concern and surprise at the drastic and hard-to-explain change in the trend of the preliminary results revealed after the closing of the polls,” it added.

Michael G. Kozak, acting assistant secretary at the U.S. State Department’s Bureau of Western Hemisphere Affairs, said on Twitter that “the U.S. rejects the Electoral Tribunal’s attempts to subvert Bolivia’s democracy by delaying the vote count.”

The interior minister, Carlos Romero, accused the opposition of trying to create trouble, warning that “they have to take care of the violence they’re generating.”

But protests multiplied across Bolivia outside vote-counting centers, with Mesa’s supporters accusing the government of fraud. In Sucre, opponents of Morales set fire to the regional headquarters of the electoral court while shouting: “Respect my vote!”

Rioting was reported in five more of Bolivia’s nine regions. In the national capital of La Paz, police used tear gas trying to quell fighting between supporters of Morales and Mesa outside a vote center. Protesters threw firecrackers and stones.

“There is a heightened risk of social unrest at the moment,” Rodrigo Riaza, a research analyst for Latin America and the Caribbean at the Economist Intelligence Unit, said earlier in the day.

“If Morales wins outright in the first round, the opposition will double down on their claims of fraud, which they have built up throughout the campaign. Protests would follow, although they are unlikely to topple Morales,” Riaza said. “International support would be weak, as there is little appetite in the region to contest Morales’ legitimacy.”

 

Categories: Politics, Latin America.

Top Comments

Disclaimer & comment rules
  • imoyaro

    Hey alright, at least the current violence isn't only one sided. Down with the would be dictator! :)

    Oct 22nd, 2019 - 06:42 am 0
  • Brasileiro

    Mr. Mesa is a millionaire with close ties to Steven Bannon. Some say that Mr. Mesa was a CIA agent when he assumed the presidency of Mr. Lozada, then neoliberal president, who fled Bolivia in 2003 to US bosses in Miami.

    We live in difficult times in South America. Just left our America to the USA Empire steal.

    https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=ZRN8KJ-B5To

    US troops on the run!

    Oct 22nd, 2019 - 01:28 pm -1
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