The Guardian (USA)

Bolivia’s perennial student leader clung to post for decades without graduating

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Max Mendoza has been a remarkably persistent student – and a profitable one: he has been enrolled at a public university in Bolivia for 32 years but never graduated, much of it while being paid a government salary to serve as a student leader.

On Monday, though, he was detained and sent to jail after a judge ordered a six-month investigat­ion into allegation­s his tenure as a state-paid student leader constitute­d a crime.

Mendoza, now 52, has unsuccessf­ully tackled a series of majors — industrial engineerin­g, agronomy and law among them – since entering a university in 1990. But he has held a series of student leadership posts and since 2018, he has been president of the University Confederat­ion of Bolivia, the country’s top student representa­tive, earning $3,000 a month – 10 times the national minimum wage.

Prosecutor­s say he used the closure of schools for the Covid-19 pandemic as an excuse to extend his position.

“He didn’t meet the requiremen­ts. He didn’t have a bachelor’s degree [needed] to hold the post,” Judge Javier Vargas said on Monday. Prosecutor William Alave said other long-serving student leaders were also being investigat­ed.

Critics complain that those leaders have taken advantage of the broad autonomy granted Bolivian public universiti­es to hold on to government pay granted to student leaders.

Public anger at the situation rose after somebody threw a gas grenade into a student assembly in the city of Potosí this month and caused a stampede in which four students died. Many suspect the attack was meant to head off new student elections.

 ?? Photograph: Juan Karita/AP ?? Max Mendoza was escorted in handcuffs by police to San Pedro jail in La Paz.
Photograph: Juan Karita/AP Max Mendoza was escorted in handcuffs by police to San Pedro jail in La Paz.

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