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The Bolivian Prosecutor’s Office imputes ex-military personnel for participating in the inauguration of Áñez

Therefore, the Prosecutor’s Office points out that the military commanders violated the “legitimacy of the State institutions and the constitutional succession” all “together” with Áñez, who required military collaboration to specify “the unlawful act” of his inauguration. .

In this way, the former chief of staff Flavio Gustavo Arce, the former commander of the Army Pastor Mendieta, the former commander of the Air Force Gonzalo Third and the former commander of the Navy Palmiro JarjuryThey are now being indicted in the case known as “coup d’etat II”, although they are already in prison for the case “coup d’état I”.

For his part, the defense attorney for the military, Eusebio Vera, pointed out that the process of which they are accused was carried out in the Plurinational Legislative Assembly, a place where “at no time have (the commanders) been constituted.” reported the Bolivian daily La Razón.

The defendants are also singled out for allegedly having ordered the removal of the medal and the presidential sash of the Central Bank of Bolivia to deliver it to Áñez in November 2019, something that Vera also rejected.

The accusation, however, points out that the military endorsed the “illegal realization of the investiture and imposition of national symbols on the alleged president of the Plurinational State of Bolivia”, all “without competence to do so and outside the Legislative Assembly.”

Finally, the Prosecutor’s Office defines the inauguration as an “irregular inauguration” of a “supposed president” and speaks of “staging” and “premeditated plan.”

According to the conclusions set out in the order, the former military officers had a “malicious participation” in “the final act of irregular presidential inauguration.”

In November 2019, Morales had to leave the country harassed by the opposition, the OAS (which issued a complaint of electoral fraud later disallowed by foreign academic audits) and a part of the Armed Forces, which did not recognize his victory in the elections of the October 20.

Two days after her departure from Bolivia, Jeanine Áñez proclaimed herself president.

A year later, with the Movement to Socialism (MAS) back in power after the triumph of the current president, Luis Arce, in the October presidential elections, Áñez is in preventive detention for various crimes of terrorism and sedition in the coup case. of State.

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