Bolivian court: Arrest Evo Morales for skipping human trafficking trial
by Macarena Hermosilla · UPIMay 11 (UPI) -- A criminal court in the Bolivian city of Tarija declared former President Evo Morales in contempt after he failed to appear for trial on charges related to the alleged trafficking of a minor.
The hearing, scheduled for Monday, was expected to begin the final stage of a case investigating Morales' alleged relationship with a 15-year-old girl in 2015, from which a child was allegedly born.
The contempt ruling triggered measures intended to ensure the appearance of the former leader of the ruling Movement for Socialism, or MAS.
Authorities issued an arrest warrant authorizing security forces to detain Morales anywhere in the country and prevent him from leaving Bolivia. The court also ordered freezing his bank accounts and precautionary registration of his assets.
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Prosecutors said they gathered more than 170 pieces of evidence in the case, which were expected to be presented during the trial.
After Morales and his legal team failed to appear in court, the judge applied Bolivian law that prohibits criminal trials in absentia.
"Because the accused failed to appear and did not legally justify his absence, this court issues a contempt ruling," the judge said, according to Bolivian newspaper El Deber.
The trial will remain suspended until Morales is arrested or voluntarily appears before the court.
Morales' defense team argued the case already had been addressed and resolved in 2020, adding the former president should not face prosecution again. His lawyers also claimed "there is no victim" and describe the charges as politically motivated, according to Chilean news outlet Emol.
Attorney Nelson Cox, a member of Morales' legal team, said insufficient security guarantees existed to transport the former president from the Chapare region of Cochabamba. He also described the case as a "political fabrication" intended to block Morales from running for office again, according to Bolivian broadcaster Unitel.
Prosecutors and lawyers representing the alleged victim criticized interruption of the trial.
"It is a mockery of the victims and the judicial system. The evidence is overwhelming and the accused must answer for his actions before the law," the regional prosecutor's office said.
Since October 2024, Morales has remained in the Chapare region, his main political stronghold, where he is protected by thousands of supporters and self-defense groups.
At that time, police were unable to execute an earlier arrest order after Morales supporters blocked roads for 24 days to prevent officers from entering the area where he remains sheltered.
The government of President Rodrigo Paz announced Tuesday it would seek information from U.S. judicial authorities to investigate Morales' alleged links to drug trafficking networks. Bolivian authorities are seeking to participate as a "victim" in ongoing U.S. legal proceedings to gain access to evidence.
One of the most significant cases involves former anti-drug chief Maximiliano Dávila, who was extradited to the United States in December 2024 and sentenced in March to 25 years in prison for conspiracy to import cocaine.
Morales has argued that Dávila's extradition is part of an effort to pressure him into testifying against the former president in exchange for legal benefits.