Houston Chronicle Sunday

Police quit posts outside Bolivia’s palace

- By Carlos Valdez

LA PAZ, Bolivia — Police guards outside Bolivia’s presidenti­al palace abandoned their posts Saturday, increasing pressure on President Evo Morales as he seeks to curb nationwide unrest after a disputed election.

Growing dissension in police ranks posed a new threat to Morales, who claimed victory after the Oct. 20 vote but has since faced protests in which three people have been killed and hundreds injured.

Morales faces “the most complicate­d moment” in his 14 years in power and the situation could deteriorat­e, said Jorge Dulon, a political analyst at the Catholic University of Bolivia in La Paz.

The Organizati­on of American States is conducting an audit of the election count. Findings are expected Monday or Tuesday. The opposition, which has alleged vote-rigging, says it will not accept the results because they were not consulted about the audit plan.

Police units in some cities started protesting Friday, marching in the streets in uniform as anti-government protesters cheered them from the sidewalks.

Gen. Williams Kaliman, the military chief, said Saturday that the military had no plans to intervene.

“We’ll never confront the people among whom we live. We guarantee peaceful co-existence,” Kaliman said. “This is a political problem and it should be resolved within that

realm.”

A list of demands from dissident police officers included better working conditions, the resignatio­n of their commander and guarantees that they won’t be used as a political “instrument of any government.”

The spectacle of police leaving their positions outside the presidenti­al palace was an ominous developmen­t for Morales.

The president was not in the palace at the time and officials there were evacuated, leaving only a military presidenti­al guard. Protesters moved peacefully to the doors of the compound, but later left the area.

Morales later gave a news conference at a military airport in which he appealed to Bolivia’s political factions to hold talks. He said the four parties that received the most votes in the ninecandid­ate election should sit down with “an open agenda to pacify Bolivia.”

Carlos Mesa, the main opposition leader and a former president, promptly rejected the suggestion.

“I have nothing to negotiate with Evo Morales, who has lost all grip on reality,” Mesa said.

After the Oct. 20 vote, the country’s first indigenous president declared himself the outright winner even before official results indicated he obtained just enough support to avoid a runoff with Mesa.

But a 24-hour lapse in releasing vote results raised suspicions among opposition supporters that there had been fraud.

 ?? Marcelo Perez del Carpio / Bloomberg ?? Growing dissension in police ranks posed a new threat to President Evo Morales, who claimed victory after the Oct. 20 vote but has since faced protests.
Marcelo Perez del Carpio / Bloomberg Growing dissension in police ranks posed a new threat to President Evo Morales, who claimed victory after the Oct. 20 vote but has since faced protests.
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