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Protests in Bolivia intensify and lead to clashes

2023.01.02 15:15

 



Protests in Bolivia intensify and lead to clashes

Budrigannews.com – Following the arrest of local governor Luis Camacho, protesters in Bolivia’s Santa Cruz farming region are blocking highways out of the province and threatening to snarl domestic transportation of grains and food.

The sixth day of protests in the region, a stronghold of the conservative opposition to socialist President Luis Arce, has seen thousands of people take to the streets, nights of clashes with weaponized fireworks, and cars being burned.

In support of Camacho and requesting his release, hundreds of women marched to the city police headquarters on Tuesday.

Vehicles that had been destroyed, smoldering fires, and blockades from the overnight clashes could be seen on the streets nearby.

The protests, which were sparked by Camacho’s arrest on Dec. 28 for an alleged 2019 coup, are widening the gap between Santa Cruz, which is in the lowlands, and La Paz, which is in the highlands and is more of an indigenous political center. These two cities have long fought over politics and state funds.

Camacho was held onto by unique police powers, removed from the territory by helicopter and is presently in a greatest security prison in the high country city El Alto. He denies all charges connected to the contentious removal of Evo Morales, the former leader of the socialist party, in 2019.

Leaders in Santa Cruz have pledged to fight until Camacho is freed, stopping grain transportation and striking government buildings. There are also calls for a federal system that gives the city more control and money from the state.

“We have an order from our gathering that nothing leaves St Nick Cruz and that is the very thing we will do,” said Rómulo Calvo, top of the strong Master St Nick Cruz community bunch.

The International Heavy Transport Association of Santa Cruz’s president, Marcelo Cruz, stated that routes were being blocked to prevent trucks from leaving the province.

“No grain, creature or supply from the plants ought to leave St Nick Cruz until the end of the country. The hindering focuses are being built up,” he said.

Morales and his allies, including the current president Arce, claim that Morales’s ouster was a coup and have brought criminal charges against opposition figures they blame for it. In 2022, Jeanine Anez was sentenced to ten years in prison for her role as interim president following his removal.

Human rights groups contend that the government is pursuing its adversaries through an ineffective legal system.

Erwin Bazan, a member of the right-wing Creemos party, declared, “We are no longer a state of law, we are an outlaw state,” asserting that the charges against Camacho were politically motivated.

Others attribute the 2019 protests that resulted in the deaths of dozens, including Morales supporters, to tensions caused by Camacho.

“Let him serve 30 years in prison. Maria Laura, a supporter of the Movement for Socialism (MAS) party in power, stated, “We want justice.”

While Morales continues to be the party’s leader, he has occasionally clashed with Arce, the new president.

Arce was attempting to disarm Morales’ criticism, according to La Paz lawyer and analyst Paul Coca, who claimed that internal divisions within the ruling party were partially to blame for the arrest.

“Arce was forced to confront his party leader or confront Luis Fernando Camacho directly. And he clearly chose to fight Camacho head-on,” he stated.

As Bolivia struggles with a significant fiscal deficit and low reserves, the blockade may hinder exports, growth, and food supply to other parts of the country.

According to Gary Rodrguez, General Manager of the Bolivian Institute of Foreign Trade (IBCE), “Santa Cruz is the economic stronghold of Bolivia.”

Soy, sugar cane, wheat, rice, corn, livestock, and rice are all primarily grown in the region.

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Protests in Bolivia intensify and lead to clashes

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