Kuwait Times

Morales narrowly wins 1st round in Bolivia election

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LA PAZ: Evo Morales, seeking a controvers­ial fourth term, led Bolivia’s presidenti­al election race Sunday but faces a historic second round run-off against opposition rival Carlos Mesa, partial results showed. Morales had 45 percent of the vote to Mesa’s 38 percent, the Supreme Electoral Tribunal announced, with most of the votes counted.

Elected Bolivia’s first indigenous president in 2005, Morales has won his previous elections in the first round, never having to contest a run-off. The former coca farmer and leftist union leader has led the poor but resource-rich Latin American country for the past 13 years, though his popularity has waned amid allegation­s of corruption and authoritar­ianism. He will face a stiff challenge from Mesa, a 66-year-old former president who led Bolivia from 2001-2005.

Mesa celebrated “an unquestion­able triumph” in getting to the second round,

amid cheers from his supporters at his La Paz headquarte­rs. Morales welcomed his first-round win, telling cheering crowds “we have won again, really, it is something historical, unforgetta­ble”. South Koreanborn evangelica­l pastor, Chi Hyun Chung, was the surprise package of the election, polling strongly to finish in third place with 8.7 percent. His support is likely to be influentia­l during campaignin­g for the second round on December 15.

Controvers­ial fourth term Morales obtained Constituti­onal Court permission in 2017 to run again for president even though the constituti­on allows only two consecutiv­e terms. A new mandate would keep him in power until 2025. “Any party, no matter how good it is, if it stays in place for too long, it is corrupt, that’s what we’re going through,” said 22-year-old student Tania Villaroel Lopez as she joined a line of voters near the presidenti­al palace in La Paz.

Roberto Fernandez, 32, came with his wife Denise and their two-year-old daughter to vote at the same place. They said they feared the result of the elections would be manipulate­d. “We hope the end result will be respected,” Fernandez said. Milton Quispe, a student, said he would vote for “Evo, because he has taken care of the poor. He has known how to give us dignity.” Bolivia’s seven million eligible voters also cast ballots to choose members of the 166-seat congress — 36 senators and 130 deputies. After voting in his coca-growing district of Chapare, Morales, a member of the Aymara indigenous community, said he was optimistic about his chances and confident in Bolivia’s democracy. —AFP

 ??  ?? LA PAZ: Bolivian President and presidenti­al candidate for the Movimiento al Socialismo (MAS) Evo Morales speaks next to his Vice-President Alvaro Garcia Linera during a press conference after knowing the partial results of the general elections at Quemado presidenti­al palace. —AFP
LA PAZ: Bolivian President and presidenti­al candidate for the Movimiento al Socialismo (MAS) Evo Morales speaks next to his Vice-President Alvaro Garcia Linera during a press conference after knowing the partial results of the general elections at Quemado presidenti­al palace. —AFP

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