Bolivians vote in election expected to bring upheaval

Published October 19, 2020
HUARINA: An indigenous woman waits to cast her vote at a polling station during Bolivia’s general election on Sunday.—AFP
HUARINA: An indigenous woman waits to cast her vote at a polling station during Bolivia’s general election on Sunday.—AFP

LA PAZ: Voters expect social upheaval for the second time in a year no matter who wins Sunday’s general election in Bolivia.

Polls opened at 8am in an election that will not feature former president Evo Morales for the first time in 20 years.

It comes a year after Morales won an unconstitutional fourth term in an election that sparked weeks of protests.

Morales, who resigned and fled into exile, is barred from taking part but his successor as leader of the Movement for Socialism (MAS) party, Luis Arce, has topped every poll since he was nominated in January.

Tensions have been running high with MAS warning of a pending “fraud” and threatening to protest should they not get their way, while misinformation has been circulating freely.

“Obviously there will be social upheaval ... we just hope it won’t last long,” Clara Quitalba, 49, from the MAS bastion of EL Alto on the outskirts of La Paz, said.

Last year protests broke out against Morales’s victory following a 24-hour halt in the live vote count that saw the incumbent’s lead jump dramatically once it resumed.

A later audit by the Organisation of American States found clear evidence of fraud.

“Hopefully it will be calm because we don’t want to go through what happened last year. It was terrible,” said Renata Zapata, 24, in La Paz.

The protests did not end with Morales’s exile as his supporters took to the streets in turn. In total, the unrest left 36 dead and 800 injured.

Published in Dawn, October 19th, 2020

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