Human rights group presses Bolivia on jailed ex-leader Áñez's health
The Inter-American Commission on Human Rights (IACHR) presses Bolivian authorities for information on the health of jailed ex-president Jeanine Áñez, who reportedly attempted suicide last month.
The Inter-American Commission on Human Rights (IACHR) has pressed Bolivian authorities for information on the health of jailed ex-president Jeanine Áñez, who attempted suicide last month, the group said Wednesday.
Áñez, 54, has been in prison since March, accused of allegedly leading a coup in 2019 to oust then-president Evo Morales.
On August 21, one of ex-leader's lawyers said she had tried to take her own life a day after prosecutors filed genocide charges against her over the death of demonstrators during protests in 2019. Áñez has denounced the charges as political prosecution.
Bolivian officials had announced Áñez tried to harm herself, with Interior Minister Eduardo del Castillo saying she had suffered only "scratches" on her arm and was in a stable condition.
Áñez's family says she suffers from depression and other medical problems and have repeatedly asked that she be transferred to a hospital, but the requests have been denied.
TheIACHR sent a letter to President Luis Arce's government, the group's spokesperson told AFP on Wednesday, without providing details.
According to Bolivian media, the letter, dated August 31, is addressed to Foreign Minister Rogelio Mayta and asks him to provide information within seven days on Áñez's "physical and mental health," as well as her access to medical care.
Áñez's legal team appealed for IACHR's help last week, saying they had exhausted all the legal avenues in Bolivia.
Conservative leader Áñez came to power in November 2019 after Morales resigned and fled the country following weeks of violent protests over his controversial re-election to an unconstitutional fourth term.
The specific accusation of genocide relates to two incidents in November 2019, in which a total of 22 people died.
After Morales resigned, Áñez, as the most senior parliamentarian left, was sworn in as interim president, but her political opponents denounced the move as a coup.
Under Áñez's administration, Bolivia held peaceful, transparent elections in October 2020, in which Morales's leftist protege Luis Arce won a landslide victory.
Arce then vowed to pursue those he accused of staging a coup.
Áñez also faces charges of terrorism, sedition and conspiracy.
Bolivia's opposition has decried the lack of separation of powers in the country, saying the courts, election officials and prosecutors are all loyal to Arce.
Áñez's detention has sparked widespread international condemnation.
– TIMES/AFP
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