Bolivia president resigns, flees country without successor

Pushed by protests and accusations of electoral fraud, President Evo Morales abruptly left for Mexico, leaving Bolivia confused and leaderless. 

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Natacha Pisarenko/AP
Opponents of former Bolivian President Evo Morales helped force the president to step down through protests like the one picture here in La Paz, Bolivia, Nov. 11, 2019. Mr. Morales stepped down under mounting pressure from the military and the public.

Bolivia faced its worst unrest in decades amid a political vacuum Tuesday, while Evo Morales, who transformed the Andean nation as its first indigenous president, fled the country following weeks of violent protests.

Mr. Morales flew out on a Mexican government plane late Monday hours after being granted asylum as his supporters and foes fought on the streets of the capital while an opposition leader tearfully laid out a possible path toward new elections in the wake of the president's resignation.

Mr. Morales stepped down Sunday following weeks of widespread protests fed by allegations of electoral fraud in the Oct. 20 presidential election that he claimed to have won. Resignations by every other constitutionally designated successor left unclear who would take his place and how.

His departure was a dramatic fall for the one-time llama shepherd from the Bolivian highlands and former coca growers' union leader who as president helped lift millions out poverty, increased social rights and presided over nearly 14 years of stability and high economic growth in South America's poorest country. In the end, though, his downfall was prompted by his insistence on holding onto power.

"It pains me to leave the country for political reasons, but I'll always be concerned," Mr. Morales said on Twitter. "l'll return soon, with more strength and energy."

Mexican Foreign Minister Marcelo Ebrard published a photo of Mr. Morales holding the flag of Mexico, saying that the plane had left Bolivia and that Mr. Morales was safe.

In an earlier tweet, Mr. Morales posted a photo of his first night after he resigned showing him lying on a floor with an improvised blanket as a bed. He said had been forced into those conditions after what he has called a coup by the opposition.

Angry supporters of the socialist leader set barricades ablaze to close some roads leading to the country's main airport Monday, while his foes blocked most of the streets leading to the capital's main square in front of Congress and the presidential palace. Police urged residents of La Paz to stay in their homes and authorities said the army would join in policing efforts to avoid an escalation of violence.

The Senate's second vice president, opposition politician Jeanine Añez, said in an emotional address that she would take temporary control of the Senate, though it was unclear if she would be able to get approval from Congress, which is controlled by Morales supporters. She would become next in line for the presidency if chosen to head the Senate.

"Please excuse me if my voice breaks," Ms. Añez said between tears after arriving in Congress under heavy guard. "It's so hard to see Bolivians clashing, no matter which side they're on. They are being mistreated, and I'm asking you to cease the violence."

Ms. Añez said she would convene a legislative session Tuesday to consider accepting the formal resignation of Mr. Morales. It was unclear, however, if lawmakers could meet that soon because of insecurity in the capital.

As tensions grew, local media reported that Morales supporters were marching on La Paz from the nearby city of El Alto, a Morales stronghold, to try to break the street blockades thrown up by his opponents and reach the capital's main square.

Gen. Williams Kaliman, the chief of the armed forces, announced the joint police-military operation in a television address. He said the hope was to "avoid bloodshed and mourning of the Bolivian family," and he urged Bolivians to help restore peace.

Anti-Morales demonstrators in downtown La Paz set tires and other barricades on fire as other people went onto their rooftops to yell, "Evo, murderer!" Rock-throwing demonstrators also clashed in Cochabamba and other cities.

His presidency, the longest among serving leaders in the region and the longest ever in Bolivia, ended abruptly Sunday, hours after Mr. Morales had accepted calls for a new election by an Organization of American States team. The team reported a "heap of observed irregularities" in the Oct. 20 election whose official results showed Mr. Morales getting just enough votes to avoid a runoff that analysts said he could lose against a united opposition.

Mr. Morales stepped aside only after the military chief called on him to quit, saying that was needed to restore peace and stability. His vice president also resigned; as did the Senate president. The only other official listed by the constitution as a presidential successor, the head of the lower house, had resigned earlier.

Mr. Morales called the ouster a coup – a description echoed by his allies and others across the region worried at the military's role in deciding who should be president.

Former President Carlos Mesa, who finished second in the election, said Mr. Morales was brought down by a popular uprising, not the military. He noted that troops did not take to the streets during the unrest.

"Academics and the press have been very critical of the Bolivian military. But this might be the only time in Bolivian military history that the military is on the right side for once," said Eduardo Gamarra, a Bolivian political scientist at Florida International University.

"There's nothing here that remotely mirrors a traditional military coup," Mr. Gamarra added. "Perhaps this is a time that the military is playing a role that it should play. It's not intervening in what are essentially civilian affairs."

Michael Shifter, head of the Washington-based think tank Inter-American Dialogue, warned that Bolivia's polarization needs to healed by new leadership.

"The temptation for any vengeance against Morales supporters needs to be resisted," Mr. Shifter said. "That would be a recipe for continued conflict and chaos that could well put at risk some of the country's undeniable socio-economic gains over the past decade."

People waiting for flights Monday morning at the airport in the eastern Bolivian city of Santa Cruz listened to the national anthem played on television and then watched replays of Mr. Morales resigning in his televised address and news of the street clashes.

"At first people believed in him as an Indian. He was much more humble and accessible, but during these 14 years, he changed," España Villegas, a linguist, said while she waited for a flight to La Paz.

Mr. Morales, who was from the poor Andean highlands, had promised to remain austere when he became president in 2006. But shortly after, he bought a new airplane and built a 26-story presidential palace with a heliport.

"He fought poverty, he lifted our economy, but perhaps he wasn't well advised," Ms. Villegas said.

Mr. Morales ran for a fourth term after refusing to accept the results of a referendum that upheld term limits for the president – restrictions thrown out by a top court that critics contend was stacked in his favor.

This story was reported by The Associated Press. Associated Press writers Paola Flores in La Paz; Franklin Briceno in Lima, Peru; and Christine Armario in Bogota, Colombia, contributed to this report.

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