World

Rival Bolivian governing party factions in street brawl

Jul 12, 2024

La Paz [Bolivia], July 12: Rival factions of the governing party in Bolivia have clashed in the city of La Paz.
Footage showed party faithful throwing stones, wielding sticks and kicking and punching each other.
The Movement Toward Socialism (Mas) is deeply split, with some backing the current president, Luis Arce, and others rallying to former president Evo Morales.
Their rivalry has become more fierce as the general election scheduled for August 2025 approaches.
The Movement Towards Socialism has been a formidable force in Bolivian politics.
With the exception of a one-year hiatus between November 2019 and November 2020, its candidates have been presiding over the country for the past 18 years. But a rift between its two most well-known leaders has divided its followers, who turned on each other on Wednesday outside the offices of the Supreme Electoral Tribunal (TSE).
Both Morales and President Arce had arrived at the TSE for a discussion with leaders of other parties about next year's general election.
The clash outside the electoral tribunal lasted several hours with supporters of Arce shouting his nickname and "you're not alone!" while those of Morales yelled "Evo president, Evo president".
The mayor of La Paz, who was on the scene appealing for calm, was injured when he was hit in the face by a stone. The brawl shows how bitter relations between supporters of the ex-president and the current leader have become.
For a long time, Morales was the undisputed head of the Mas, leading it to election wins in 2005, 2009 and 2014.
However, his decision to run for a fourth consecutive term as president in the 2019 election drew criticism from some inside his party's ranks - as well as from opposition forces.
Those opposed to another run by Morales argued that it went against the will of the people, as Bolivians had voted against scrapping presidential term limits in 2016.
But those backing the president said that a 2017 constitutional court decision lifting term limits made his fourth candidacy legally sound.
Morales was declared the winner of the 2019 election, but resigned weeks later amid continuing protests triggered by reports of irregularities in the vote count and went into exile.
Morales has long maintained that he was forced to resign by the military and that his departure from office constituted a "coup".
A caretaker government led by right-wing senator Jeanine Áñez led Bolivia until new polls were scheduled.
In the rerun of the election held the following year, Morales's former finance minister and firm ally, Luis Arce, ran for the Mas party and won by a landslide. Morales returned to the country, but soon fell out with Arce.
Source: Qatar Tribune

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