Protests after Morales flees
Opposition leader moves to fill Bolivia power vacuum
Clashes have broken out in the streets of the Bolivia’s administrative capital La Paz after an opposition leader in the Senate declared herself the country’s interim president following the resignation of Evo Morales.
Jeanine Anez assumed temporary control of the Senate, putting her next in line for the presidency. Lawmakers of Morales’ Movement for Socialism party were not present when she made the announcement.
Angry Morales supporters tried to reach the Congress building chanting, “She must quit!” Police and soldiers fired tear gas as they tried to disperse the crowd.
Morales, who sought to transform Bolivia as its first indigenous President, flew to exile in Mexico on Tuesday as thousands of his supporters clamoured for his return in the streets of the Bolivian capital.
Military fighter jets flew repeatedly over La Paz in a show of force while security forces blocked Morales loyalists trying to march to the main square.
“We’re not afraid!” shouted demonstrators, who believe the ouster of Morales was a coup d’etat as well as an act of discrimination against Bolivia’s indigenous communities.
“Evo was like a father to me. We had a voice, we had rights,” said 35-year-old Maria Apasa. Like Morales, she is a member of the Aymara indigenous group.
Despite their anger, the demonstrators were peaceful. The march followed weeks of clashes and protests against Morales, who was accused by his detractors of becoming increasingly authoritarian and rigging an election. His resignation on Monday led to a power vacuum.
Morales was met at Mexico City’s airport by Foreign Secretary Marcelo Ebrard after a 6000km flight from Bolivia on a Mexican Government plane and repeated his allegations he had been forced to resign by a coup.
“The President of Mexico saved my life,” Morales said, thanking President Andres Manuel Lopez Obrador for granting him asylum. He vowed to “continue the struggle”.
Ebrard said Mexican diplomats had to scramble to arrange a flight path for the plane because some nations closed airspace to it. The plane stopped in Paraguay to refuel.
Urged to resign by the military, Morales had stepped down after widespread outrage fed by allegations of electoral fraud in the October 20 presidential election that he claimed to have won. Resignations by all other constitutionally designated successors left it unclear who would take his place and how.
Anez had positioned herself to become interim president by taking temporary control of the Senate and moving into a spot to succeed to the presidency.
Morales’ resignation still needed to be approved by both houses of Congress. And lawmakers failed to get the quorum for an assembly session yesterday. Anez also needed to be approved as president of the Senate, but she said that lawmakers loyal to Morales declined to be part of the session and that Bolivia could not be left in a power vacuum.
Morales’ departure was a dramatic fall for the one-time llama shepherd from the Bolivian highlands and former coca growers’ union leader who as President helped lift millions out poverty, increased social rights and presided over nearly 14 years of stability and high economic growth in South America’s poorest country.
In the end, though, his downfall was prompted by his insistence on holding onto power.
He ran for a fourth term after refusing to accept the results of a referendum that upheld term limits for the president — restrictions thrown out by a top court that critics contend was stacked in his favour.
Morales’ stepped aside shortly after accepting calls for a new election by an Organisation of American States team. The team reported irregularities in the election whose official results showed Morales getting just enough votes to avoid a runoff that analysts said he could lose against a united opposition.