The Indian Express (Delhi Edition)

Striking miners kidnap, murder Bolivian minister

- ASSOCIATED PRESS

BOLIVIAN AUTHORITIE­S accused the president of a mining federation and two of his top officials of the killing of deputy interior minister Rodolfo Illanes amid a bitter strike, officials said Saturday. Forty miners have been detained in the case.

Illanes was kidnapped and beaten to death by striking mine workers on Thursday after to going to the town of Panduro, 130 km south of La Paz, to mediate in the dispute over mining laws and dwindling paychecks.

Three protesters have been killed in clashes with riot police, stoking tensions.

The striking miners had armed themselves with dynamite and seized several highways.

Bolivia’s Attorney General’s Office has detained 40 miners, among them protest leader Carlos Mamani, president of the National Federation of Mining Cooperativ­es of Bolivia. On Saturday afternoon, Mamani and two other federation officials were accused by the Public Ministry in Illanes’ death.

An autopsy found that Illanes died from trauma to the brain and thorax. The blockaded highway in Panduro was clear Friday as the miners returned to their camps.

Illanes’ murder underscore­d how President Evo Morales, a former coca growers’ union leader, has increasing­ly found himself at odds with the same kind of popular social movements that fueled his rise to power and have made up his political base.

The leftist president called the beating death of the deputy minister “a conspiracy” to overthrow him. Bolivia’s informal miners number about 100,000 and work in self-managed cooperativ­es producing primarily zinc, tin, silver and gold. They want to be able to associate with private companies, which promise to put more cash in their pockets, but are currently prohibited from doing so.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from India