Bolivia governor arrest stokes fears of political revenge cycle
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[January 04, 2023]
By Brendan O'Boyle
(Reuters) - The arrest of a prominent Bolivian opposition figure has
sparked criticism from human rights groups and thrown a spotlight on how
both the country's right and left have used a weak judicial system to go
after opponents.
Police arrested Luis Camacho, the right-wing governor of opposition
stronghold and farming province Santa Cruz, on Dec. 28 on terrorism
charges related to what authorities call a coup in 2019 against then
leftist leader Evo Morales. Camacho denies the charges.
Camacho's arrest has sparked a weeklong protest by his supporters, whose
ongoing highway blockades could snarl the movement of food and grains.
Camacho, a staunch opponent of Morales' socialist MAS party, joins a
long line of leaders in Bolivia on both sides of the political spectrum
either jailed or threatened with incarceration.
"We have seen in the past how the crime of terrorism has been used by
left- and right-wing governments in Bolivia as an instrument to
persecute opponents," said Cesar Munoz, associate Americas director at
Washington-based Human Rights Watch.
There was "very fragile" justification for Camacho's pre-trial
imprisonment and the use of a "very broad" definition of terrorism,
Munoz added.
As a civic leader in 2019, Camacho led protests against Morales, whose
party is now back in power under President Luis Arce. Morales had
clinched a fourth term in defiance of term limits and a referendum vote
against him being allowed to run.
Bolivia's government says Camacho must face justice for what it calls a
coup against Morales, who resigned under pressure as the 2019 protests
spread, the police mutinied, and union groups and finally the military
urged him to step down.
"We're not moved by hate or revenge. What moves us is an unwavering
desire for justice in the country," Arce said in 2021. Last week, the
attorney general said the case against Camacho had followed due process
and was not "political persecution".
International analysts though point to a trend of Bolivian governments
using the justice system to target opponents.
The interim right-wing government of Jeanine Anez, who took power after
Morales resigned, issued an arrest warrant for the leftist leader over
allegations of sedition and terrorism. It also detained officials
including his interior minister.
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People attend a protest to demand
imprisonment for Santa Cruz opposition governor Luis Fernando
Camacho, who was arrested by Bolivia's police on Wednesday, outside
the state attorney's office in La Paz, Bolivia, December 29, 2022.
REUTERS/Claudia Morales/File Photo
Arce's government, which won election in 2020, then prosecuted Anez
herself on terrorism charges related to her assumption of power. She
was held in pretrial detention for over a year before being
sentenced to 10 years in jail in 2022 in the coup case.
Marco Pumari, a civic leader who ran unsuccessfully on a ticket with
Camacho in the 2020 election, is also in pretrial detention on
charges of arson during the protests in 2019.
Bolivia's justice ministry did not respond to requests for comment.
'PERSISTENT DYSFUNCTION'
The country's judiciary is widely seen as weak. The World Justice
Project's 2022 Rule of Law index ranked Bolivia 130th out of 140
countries overall, 135th in terms of judicial corruption and 139th
on criminal justice, only ahead of Venezuela.
"The persistent dysfunction in the judiciary has made it a political
weapon," said V. Ximena Velasco-Guachalla, a lecturer at the
University of Essex.
In a 2022 report, the UN Human Rights Committee said it was
concerned at "cases of political interference and corruption" in
Bolivia's judiciary, which it said was weakened by a lack of funding
and short-term appointments of judges and prosecutors.
The Inter-American Commission on Human Rights, a day after Camacho's
arrest, condemned "the intense use of the judiciary to persecute
free expression of thought and the arbitrary deprivation of people's
liberty for political reasons in the region." It did not mention
Bolivia directly.
Some fear more opposition figures could face a similar fate.
"If the government gets its way, we could in the next year see more
opposition leaders behind bars," said Raul Penaranda, a Bolivian
journalist and free press advocate.
(Reporting by Brendan O'Boyle; Editing by Adam Jourdan and Lisa
Shumaker)
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