Bolivian court orders ex-president jailed for five months on corruption charges
LA PAZ, Bolivia (AP) — A Bolivian court on Friday ordered the country’s former President Luis Arce to remain detained for five months while he awaits trial on corruption charges, the latest development in a case that threatens to exacerbate Bolivia’s political tensions.
Arce, 62, a leader from Bolivia’s Movement Toward Socialism party, was elected in 2020 and left office a month ago following the election of Bolivia’s first right-wing leader in nearly two decades.
He strongly denies the charges of breach of duty and financial misconduct. He faces up to six years in prison if convicted.
Two days after Arce’s sudden arrest on the streets of Bolivia’s capital of La Paz, a judge ordered his detention in a virtual hearing Friday.
Arce was transferred to one of Bolivia’s largest prisons in La Paz at night. No trial date was announced.
The accusations concern the alleged diversion of millions of dollars from a state fund into private accounts and date back to when Arce served as economy minister under former President Evo Morales from 2006 until 2017.
Although the scandal first broke in 2017, investigations into the alleged graft stalled during Morales’ presidency as Bolivia’s courts proved submissive to the political power of the day.
The case was reopened when conservative President Rodrigo Paztook office last month, ending almost two decades of dominance by the Movement Toward Socialism, or MAS, party.
Paz campaigned on a promise to clean up the government and seek justice for corruption as he rode to power on a wave of outrage over Bolivia’s worst economic crisis in four decades.
Arce criticized the charges as political persecution.
“I’m a scapegoat,” he told the judge, insisting that he had no personal involvement in the government fund under scrutiny, which supported the Indigenous people and peasant farmers who formed the backbone of MAS support.
“The accusations are politically motivated.”
Officials involved in the previous iteration of the investigation say Arce is accused of siphoning off money from rural development projects to secure loyalty from MAS-allied union and Indigenous leaders during election campaigns.
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