Bolivia judge confirms ex-president Evo Morales cannot run for Senate seat
Judge rules that former president is not eligible to run for a Senate seat in October's elections, given his current residence in Argentina.
A judge in Bolivia has ruled that former president Evo Morales is not eligible to run for a Senate seat in October's elections, the government has confirmed.
Justice Minister Álvaro Coimbra wrote on Twitter, "Urgent Evo Morales Disqualified" on Monday, after Judge Alfredo Jaimes Terrazas confirmed the former president was barred from running, in line with a decision by the Supreme Electoral Commission in February.
"They denied protection to Evo Morales, democracy won," said lawyer Williams Bascope, one of the judicial team who weighed the constitutional protections presented by the ex-president's defence team.
Morales, 60, is a hugely influential figure in Bolivia even though he currently lives in exile in Argentina after 14 years in power. He fled into exile following three weeks of protests against his controversial re-election to an unconstitutional fourth term last October.
The indigenous leader had appealed to the constitutional court in La Paz to overturn the electoral commission’s decision and permit him to run as a sSnate candidate for the central region of Cochabamba, where he emerged as a political leader decades ago.
"Evo Morales cannot be a candidate for senator because he lives in Argentina," said Bascope.
Neither Morales nor his party, the Movement for Socialism (MAS), issued a statement in the immediate aftermath of the announcement.
Bolivia heads to the polls on October 18, a year after the elections that triggered mass protests over allegations of being rigged.
– TIMES/AFP
related news
-
MercadoLibre weathers Argentina tumult with Mexico, Brazil gains
-
US reprimands Latin American nations in parental kidnapping report
-
Milei's foreign policy based on whims and mystical fantasies
-
Gaza conflict shows limits of Argentina and Brazil’s influence in Middle East
-
Netflix is betting big on Latin America to expand its viewership
-
Argentine firms refuse to refuel Cuban state airline’s planes
-
Time for 'democratic transition' in Venezuela, says opposition candidate
-
Mercosur deal is ‘absolute priority’ for the EU, says chief negotiator
-
Stories that caught our eye: April 12 to 19
-
Banned Venezuela opposition leader Machado insists she is 'Plan A'