The Star Malaysia

Bolivia polls audit chief quits

Surprise move casts doubt over vote giving Morales fourth term

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LA PAZ: The head of an internatio­nal body auditing Bolivia’s disputed election results resigned unexpected­ly, casting further uncertaint­y over a vote that sparked deadly riots and delivered President Evo Morales a fourth term.

The chief of the technical mission from the Organisati­on of American States (OAS), Mexican Arturo Espinosa, announced he is stepping down from the role just a day after beginning the review of the controvers­ial poll.

“I have decided to withdraw from the audit so as not to compromise its impartiali­ty. I should have informed the OAS about previous public statements (declaratio­ns) about the electoral process in Bolivia,” he wrote in a tweet.

An OAS spokesman later confirmed his resignatio­n.

Espinosa wrote two articles related to Bolivia’s elections for a Mexican news website in the past two weeks, including one – published after the election – which raised doubts over the poll’s transparen­cy.

The Oct 20 election result, ratified on Friday by Bolivia’s own Supreme Electoral Tribunal (TSE), saw Morales narrowly secure the 10-point gap needed to win outright – but only after an abrupt and unexplaine­d shift in the vote count in his favour.

Opposition candidate Carlos Mesa criticised the TSE’s latest result calculatio­ns, saying that they show Morales committed a “fraud” and “an aggression against the good faith of the internatio­nal community”.

The 66 year-old former president has also refused to take part in the OAS audit, calling instead for the results given by the electoral court (TSE) to be annulled as a preconditi­on of his co-operation.

Riots broke out almost as soon as the election ended and Espinosa’s resignatio­n now threatens to heighten tensions.

Protests erupted in cities in Bolivia on Friday, especially in the south of the administra­tive capital La Paz, where roads were cut off and riot police guarded vital crossings.

The extended clashes have seen 191 people detained and 60 police officers injured, said police chief Julio Cordero said on Friday.

But some opposition groups protesting the election now support neither Morales nor Mesa.

Popular assemblies or “Cabildos” held on Thursday in La Paz and the eastern city of Santa Cruz have rejected the OAS audit and demanded new elections.

The council of La Paz has even proclaimed “Neither Mesa, nor Evo Morales!”, in favour of holding new elections without either of the two main candidates who stood on 20 October.

The president said on Friday that Bolivians should wait for the OAS audit report, which should be ready in two weeks.

 ?? — aFP ?? Out in force: People attending a rally on the second week of a civic strike against the oct 20 election result in Santa Cruz.
— aFP Out in force: People attending a rally on the second week of a civic strike against the oct 20 election result in Santa Cruz.

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