Skip to main content
Bolivian court rules MAS may stand – but threat to democracy remains, says activist
Riot police detain a supporter of Movement Towards Socialism Party (MAS) after clashing with opponents of former President Evo Morales outside a court of justice in La Paz, Bolivia, yesterday

A BOLIVIAN court ruling that the Movement Towards Socialism (MAS) will not be banned from standing in this month’s election does not negate the threat of democracy being crushed again, a Bolivian democracy campaigner says.

Miriam Amancay Colque of the Bartolina Sisa Resistance said the court’s decision on Monday was “very important and testimony to the strength of the MAS,” but “let us remember that many MAS candidates to the plurinational legislative assembly have been disqualified with unjustified excuses. [Former president] Evo Morales is one of them. Former foreign minister Diego Pary is another.

And she pointed to violence right outside the court — right-wing thugs set upon MAS supporters waiting to hear the verdict with baseball bats — as evidence that there is no guarantee the election will be allowed to proceed smoothly.

Donate to the Fighting Fund
Support the Morning Star
You have reached the free limit.
Subscribe to continue reading.
More from this author
Burnt cars remain in the middle of a street following the re
Features / 22 March 2025
22 March 2025
Ben Chacko asks NIZAR TRABULSI of the now banned Syrian Communist Party (Unified) to explain the country's turbulent, and violent, post-Assad scene
Delegates chat as they leave the Great Hall of the People af
Features / 22 March 2025
22 March 2025
From renewable tech to alternatives to the dollar, BEN CHACKO was encouraged by an optimistic meeting held by the China Media Group this week
Similar stories
Former Bolivian President Evo Morales participates in an off
Features / 25 February 2025
25 February 2025
After years of struggle in the MAS party, the mass movement of left-wing peasants and workers has founded a new party, with former president Evo Morales as its candidate for the summer’s elections, writes CINDY FORSTER