zaterdag 17 oktober 2020

Bolivian Fascists

 

Bolivia election observers threat Arturo Murillo

Unelected Bolivian govt detains, doxxes, threatens international observers on eve of election

Bolivia’s unelected transitional administration has repeatedly threatened international electoral observers, detained monitors from Argentina in the airport, and shared the private information of Spanish supervisors with a far-right activist.

By Ben Norton

LA PAZ, BOLIVIA – On the eve of Bolivia’s first election since a violent November 2019 military takeover that removed President Evo Morales from office, the un-elected de facto government has detained, doxxed, and threatened international electoral observers.

On October 16, Bolivia’s migration department shared the private information and photos of Spanish electoral observers with a far-right activist, who promptly published these sensitive materials on social media, spawning a campaign of incitement against the monitors.

Later that day, the right-wing Bolivian administration detained observers from Argentina in the airport outside the capital of La Paz. Among the monitors apprehended by police were numerous members of Congress. Video later circulated showing an apparent Argentine embassy official being roughed up by Bolivian police as he accompanied the delegation.

These disturbing incidents took place within a larger context of threats by Bolivia’s coup administration and its supporters against international observers who traveled to the country to monitor the October 18 general election.

Several contributors to The Grayzone, including Max Blumenthal, Anya Parampil, and Ben Norton, are electoral observers in Bolivia from a delegation organized by the US human rights organization CODEPINK. Even before we entered the country, we were stalked and threatened by Bolivian coup officials, and have since received a flood of violent threats.

Bolivian coup administration doxxes Spanish electoral observers

On October 16, an extreme right-wing Spanish blogger named Alejandro Entrambasaguas published the private information of Spanish electoral observers. He obtained it all from the Bolivian migration department.

Entrambasaguas shared the photos, full names, and records that four Spanish monitors filed when they entered Bolivia. The photos were captured by the migration department at customs. The only way Entrambasaguas could have access to these sensitive materials is if they were provided to him by sympathetic sources inside the Bolivian coup regime.

The four doxxed Spanish lawmakers had official invitations from the Supreme Electoral Tribunal to serve as observers. They included Lucía Muñoz, of Podemos; Francisco José Pérez, of Izquierda Unida; Maite Mola, of the Party of the European Left; and Gerardo Pisarello, of Barcelona en Comú.

Entrambasaguas writes for a right-wing website called Okdiario. He has made his name as a staunch defender of Bolivia’s coup administration, going to extreme lengths to attack the left-wing Movement Toward Socialism (MAS) party of former democratically elected President Evo Morales, often with extremely dubious stories based on rumors and little to no evidence.

The right-wing Spanish blogger’s full legal name is Alejandro Sanmiguel Entrambasaguas. He hails from a powerful oligarchic family in Spain, and is often criticized for frequently spreading fake news.

After the 2019 coup d’etat, Bolivia’s de facto government appointed the far-right activist Marcel Rivas as the head of migration.

Rivas has threatened other electoral observers, including the CODEPINK delegation, which includes The Grayzone contributors.

Rivas is also notorious in Bolivia for sharing the private information of targets on social media, doxxing his political opponents.

Bolivian coup administration detains Argentine electoral observers

Later on the evening of October 16, the campaign against international observers escalated from online threats to the physical detention of Argentine lawmakers.

Three members of Argentina’s Congress from the governing center-left Frente de Todos coalition traveled to Bolivia to ensure that the election was transparent.

As soon as he arrived at the El Alto airport outside the Bolivian capital of La Paz, Argentine Congressman Federico Fagioli was apprehended by armed police.

Paula Penacca, another Argentine member of Congress and electoral observer who was blocked from entering Bolivia, published video and photos on Twitter showing heavily armed police accusing her colleague Fagioli of committing “crimes against humanity,” without presenting any evidence.

From his official Twitter account, Fagioli stated, “This is another clear example of the right-wing’s attack on democracies on our continent. We insist that they allow us to observer the elections to ensure their transparency and denounce any acts that violate the human rights of the Bolivian people.”

The third member of the Argentine delegation, lawmaker Leonardo Grosso, said they had been invited by Bolivia’s National Assembly and the president of the Senate, Eva Copa.

The unelected administration of President Jeanine Áñez apparently does not recognize these observers because they did not obtain official invitations from the de facto government-controlled Supreme Electoral Tribunal (TSE).

Grosso tweeted video showing police attacking an Argentine diplomat who was accompanying the delegation. The footage also shows Bolivian authorities throwing Fagioli into an unmarked car, as the lawmaker shouted “I am being kidnapped.”

Grosso called the de facto government a “dictatorship,” adding, “This is an absolute blow against democracy. They are violating all kinds of laws and international treaties.”

Argentine President Alberto Fernández tweeted a statement late the same night condemning the “maltreatment” of the lawmakers, stating, “It is the direct responsibilty of the de facto government of Jeanine Áñez to preserve the integrity of the Argentine delegation.”

Bolivia’s unelected top minister repeatedly threatens electoral observers

One of the most powerful people in Bolivia’s coup administration is the draconian Interior Minister Arturo Murillo.

On October 15, Murillo tweeted an indirect threat to the CODEPINK electoral observers: “Behave, we know who you are and where you are.”

Next, in a press conference on October 16, Murillo doubled down on his threats against international monitors, falsely claiming “most of them are leftists and agitators,” and pledging to imprison or deport them if they crossed any lines.

The unelected Bolivian government’s systematic intimidation and physical detention of international observers has revealed its deep-seated fear of transparency. On August 18, it will become increasingly clear what it was trying to hide.

https://thegrayzone.com/2020/10/16/bolivia-detains-doxxes-election-observers/



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