Home WebMail | Calgary | 16.4°C | Regions Advertise Login | Our platform is in maintenance mode. Some URLs may not be available. |
Action News
  • World
    • Asia
    • Europe
    • Africa
    • Americas
  • Politics
  • Business
  • Technology
  • Entertainment
  • Sports
  • Contact
  • Breaking News
  • Latest Updates
  • Featured
  • Live
  • Live Now
  • Ceasefire declared between Syrian forces, Kurdish fighters after one killed
  • Italy-Israel World Cup tie faces security concerns amid protests
  • German mayor-elect gravely wounded in stabbing attack
  • Italy to propose global ceasefire for 2026 Winter Olympics
  • Displaced Palestinians hope to return home amid ceasefire talks
  • Tunisia pardons man sentenced to death over Facebook posts
  • Israel is fractured, isolated after two years of its war on Gaza: Analysts
  • What is Insurrection Act, could it help Trump deploy troops to US cities?
  • Fifth French PM quits in three years: Can Macron survive, and what’s next?
  • Pope Leo plans symbolic debut foreign trips to Turkiye and Lebanon
  • Malaysia football federation to fight FIFA sanctions for cheating claims
  • Myanmar activists to sue Norway’s Telenor for handing data to military
  • Is Donald Trump trying to dial back tensions with Brazil?
  • Gaza girl removes ‘stray bullet’ after being injured by an Israeli drone
  • What caused Nepal’s devastating flood damage and how was it contained?
  • Outgoing French PM launches last-gasp bid to quell political crisis
  • Japanese football official sentenced for viewing child pornography images
  • Video: Search for bodies called off after Indonesia school collapse
  • Farah and Myriam: Childhood Under Siege in Gaza
  • The second year of genocide was different
  • French lawmaker “beaten” by Israeli police
  • Al Jazeera reporter reflects on two years of war in Gaza
  • Fighting reported in Syria’s Aleppo between army and SDF
  • Nobel Prize in Physics awarded to trio for quantum mechanics discoveries
  • The young children killed by Israeli fire this year in occupied West Bank

In Pictures: Bolivia’s Morales back from year in exile

By Al Jazeera Published 2020-11-11 14:20 Updated 2020-11-11 14:20 Source: Al Jazeera

Thousands of supporters of Bolivia’s ex-President Evo Morales crowded into his political stronghold on Wednesday for a climactic rally to mark his triumphant return to his homeland.

Morales arrived in Chimore, in the heart of Bolivia’s coca-growing region, at the head of a cavalcade of vehicles that has accompanied him on a 600-mile (960km) homecoming tour since crossing the border from Argentina on Monday.

The rally has special significance for Morales, who fled Chimore a year ago for exile – initially in Mexico, then in Argentina – having lost the support of the armed forces amid violent protests against his re-election to an unconstitutional fourth term.

Morales was accompanied to the border on Monday by Argentine President Alberto Fernandez, before crossing on foot and being greeted by hundreds of joyous supporters.

Morales spent 11 months in Argentina after he resigned as president and fled the country after his failed bid for a fourth term.

Hundreds of people braved a chill wind in Villazon, on the Bolivian side of the border, since dawn as they waited to greet Morales, who ruled Bolivia for more than 13 years as its first Indigenous president.

Wearing colourful traditional clothing and waving banners and the Indigenous Wiphala flag, they acclaimed Morales’s return with cheers.

“We are happy. He is like our father, the father of all these humble people. He has returned and will always be with us in our hearts,” said Alejandra Choque, a 56-year-old housewife.

But many local villagers, like 49-year-old butcher Mirian Franco, paid no heed to the returning hero.

“I have to open my business, the pandemic and the closing of the borders is killing me. I can’t go and see Evo, he won’t bring me any money,” she said.

The three-day road trip back to his political base was loaded with symbolism for the 61-year-old former coca farmer turned president.

It comes after his successor as head of the Movement for Socialism (MAS) party, Luis Arce, was inaugurated as president after winning last month’s election.

Morales had been the subject of a detention order for “terrorism” by the previous right-wing interim government, but that was lifted by the public prosecutor following Arce’s election victory.

He is also under investigation for “rape and trafficking” over two alleged relationships with underage girls, including one with whom he supposedly fathered a child.

Bolivia has one of the largest Indigenous populations in Latin America, representing 41 percent of the country’s 11.5 million population.

More than 34 percent live in poverty, their situation made worse by the coronavirus pandemic.

Many are hoping for a reprise of the so-called “economic miracle”, a boom period that saw much of the country’s industry and infrastructure modernised under Morales, with Arce as his economy minister.

Morales remains an immensely popular figure and many Bolivians believe his return risks overshadowing Arce’s leadership, and wonder who will really be pulling the strings of the new government.