Business Day

Chaos in Bolivia as Morales exit leaves vacuum

- Daniel Ramos La Paz

Looting, fighting and roadblocks convulsed Bolivia on Monday after President Evo Morales’s resignatio­n ended his 14-year rule and created a power vacuum after weeks of protest.

The departure of Bolivia’s first indigenous president, who was the last survivor of a wave of leftist leaders in Latin America from two decades ago, came on Sunday when the military abandoned him amid unrest over his October 20 re-election.

The Organisati­on of American States (OAS) had denounced “clear manipulati­ons” and urged a fresh vote.

“I am afraid of what will happen, everything is a mess in the city. There are fights between neighbours,” said La Paz resident Patricia Paredes.

Overnight, gangs roamed the highland capital and other cities, businesses were attacked, rival political supporters clashed and properties were set on fire. Schools and shops were largely closed, while public transport halted and roads were blocked.

Morales, 60, flew out of La Paz and was believed to still be in Bolivia — but his exact whereabout­s were unclear. He said he stepped down to ease the violence, but repeated on Monday accusation­s that he was the victim of a conspiracy by political enemies including election rival Carlos Mesa and protest leader Luis Fernando Camacho.

“The world and our Bolivian patriots repudiate the coup,” he tweeted. “They moved me to tears. They never abandoned me. I will never abandon them.”

Argentinia­n president-elect Alberto Fernandez echoed Morales’s

denunciati­ons of a coup, as did Mexico, which has offered him asylum. “It’s a coup because the army requested the resignatio­n of the president, and that violates the constituti­onal order of that country,” Mexican foreign minister Marcelo Ebrard said.

In a redrawing of Latin America’s political landscape, the left has regained power in both Mexico and Argentina, though powerhouse Brazil still retains a right-wing government.

In Venezuela, opponents of leftist leader Nicolas Maduro, an ally of Morales, celebrated the fall of the Bolivian leader, calling him a “dictator” and saying they hoped Maduro would be next.

Further afield, the US urged civilian leaders to keep control.

Amid the chaos, prominent opposition figure and academic Waldo Albarracin tweeted that his house had been set on fire by Morales supporters.

Another widely shared video appeared to show people inside Morales’s own property with graffiti daubed on the walls.

“People are trying to cause chaos,” said Edgar Torrez, a 40year-old business administra­tor in La Paz, saying politician­s and criminals were all taking advantage of the situation.

Morales’s vice-president and many of his political allies in government and parliament stepped down with him, and it was unclear who would take the helm pending a new election.

Bolivia under Morales had one of the region’s strongest economic growth rates and its poverty rate was cut in half, though his determinat­ion to cling to power and seek a fourth term alienated many allies, even among indigenous communitie­s.

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