Английская Википедия:2023 in Bolivia

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Шаблон:Short description Шаблон:Use American English Шаблон:Use dmy dates Шаблон:Year in Bolivia The following is a chronology of notable events from the year 2023 in Bolivia.

Шаблон:Horizontal TOC

Incumbents

National government

Events by month

January

  • 1 January
    • Sustained protests in Santa Cruz over the arrest of Governor Luis Fernando Camacho continue into the new year. Demonstrators clash with police in the vicinity of the Cristo Redentor monument, while stray fires char portions of government facilities.[1] In an attempt to quell the unrest, Police Command shuts down traffic across the second ring of the city and begins limiting freedom of movement for local residents, who are pressured to stay in their homes under threat of tear gas.[2] In response to police repression, solidarity protests spring up across the country, including in Sucre.[3] In other departments, local civic organizations begin plans to organize their own demonstrations, while in La Paz, the National Committee for the Defense of Democracy announces preparations for nationwide mobilizations against police brutality.[4]
    • Criminal justice authorities register the first two incidents of femicide in the country. The first occurred in Tarija in the early hours of the morning, while a second incident took place at approximately 3:50Шаблон:Nbspp.m. in the small community of Choreti, near Camiri.[5]
    • President Luis Arce travels to Brazil to attend the inauguration of Luiz Inácio Lula da Silva.[6] There, he also meets with members of Russia's Federal Council to discuss increasing bilateral relations in the fields of commerce, energy, and technology.[7]
Файл:Roadblocks in Santa Cruz. 7 November 2022, Agencia Boliviana de Información, Santa Cruz de la Sierra. (52604485739).jpg
The year started with unrest in Santa Cruz Department (Bolivia) over the detention of the region's governor.
  • 2 January
    • Protests rage on in Santa Cruz as demonstrators clash with police for the sixth night in a row.[8] In the provinces, protesters install new and reinforce existing blockades along roads and highways, including those connecting the region to other departments.[9] Interdepartmental commerce is paralyzed as Santa Cruz's largest meat and grain companies terminate the sale of produce to the interior.[10][11] Elsewhere in the country, new protests against police repression and in support of Camacho spring up in Cochabamba, La Paz, and Tarija and continue in Sucre.[12][13]
    • From prison, Camacho suffers significant health decompensation, including partial muscle and nerve paralysis.[14] A hearing on whether the governor should be transferred to a hospital is opened at the Eighth Criminal Sentencing Court of Santa Cruz but is quickly suspended after the judge declines jurisdiction at the request of the Prosecutor's Office.[15]
  • 3 January
    • As protests continue in Santa Cruz, civic leaders announce a shift in strategy, imploring demonstrators to block the transfer of any and all local resources to the central government. Multiple ranchers' associations in both Santa Cruz and neighboring Beni initiate boycotts, closing off the transport of grains and food to the rest of the country.[16][17]
    • At separate ceremonies in Sucre, the Supreme Tribunal of Justice and Plurinational Constitutional Court inaugurate the legal year, while at a third event in the city, magistrate Tereza Garrón is sworn in as president of the Agro-environmental Tribunal.[18]
    • After over half a year in preventative detention, Max Mendoza, a former student leader accused of corruption, is released from San Pedro prison on house arrest and his bail is set at BsШаблон:Nbsp40,000. The Prosecutor's Office, Attorney General's Office, and the Higher University of San Andrés all announce their intent to appeal the decision.[19]
  • 4 January
    • At an emergency meeting in Santa Cruz, civic associations from multiple departments issue a call for nationwide protest measures.[20] In response, the Bolivian Workers' Center declares itself in a state of emergency and announces the scheduling of meetings with other pro-government groups regarding possible counter-protests.[21]
    • Foreign deputies Victor González of the Spanish Vox party and Fernando Sánchez of the Chilean Republican Party, who had previously arrived in Santa Cruz to advocate the release of Camacho, are expelled from the country by the national government. The Foreign Ministry denounced that the two parliamentarians had been acting as a diplomatic mission despite a lack of authorization from their respective legislatures. An official complaint rejecting the two parliamentarians' "meddling in Bolivia's internal political affairs" is delivered to the Chilean and Spanish embassies.[22]
    • In the United States, former minister of government Arturo Murillo is sentenced to seventy months in prison for the crimes of bribery and money laundering. As part of a plea deal reached the preceding October, in which he waived the right to appeal, Murillo's sentence was reduced from twenty years. From Bolivia, Attorney General Wilfredo Chávez announces the government's intent to request Murillo's extradition back to the country once his sentence in the US is fulfilled.[23][24]
  • 5 January
    • Following an investigation into Camacho's financial dealings during the 2019 crisis, government prosecutor's amplify the existing suit against the governor, levying charges of bribery and seduction of troops.[25]
    • In Peru, Congressman Jorge Montoya of the ultra-conservative Popular Renewal party files a criminal suit against former president Evo Morales for the alleged crime of "attacking [the country's] national integrity." During the presidency of Pedro Castillo, Morales had been active in the country's southern regions, promoting the integration its indigenous peoples into RUNASUR, a regional non-governmental organization.[26]
Файл:President Luis Arce Meets with Members of the Pact of Unity and Bolivian Workers' Center. 6 January 2023, Agencia Boliviana de Información, La Paz. (52612022760).jpg
As protests spread, pro-government groups initiated their own marches.
  • 6 January
    • After a five-hour meeting with President Arce at the Casa Grande del Pueblo, members of the Pact of Unity—a consortium of the country's largest trade unions and social organizations—declared themselves in a state of emergency and announce the initiation of mass mobilizations in all nine departments starting on 9 January.[27]
    • Imprisoned former president Jeanine Áñez receives an added four months of preventative detention as part of an investigation into the irregular appointment of public officials in the Bolivian Food Company.[28]
    • Members of Chuquisaca's Departmental Federation of Neighborhood Councils initiate protests in Sucre against an increase in bus fares imposed by the San Cristóbal Bus Union.[29]
    • Following an appeal by the Prosecutor's Office, Judge Jorge Pérez of the Third Criminal Court of Potosí orders house arrest for Governor Jhonny Mamani as part of an investigation into the corrupt purchase of forty-one ambulances. The decision overturns a lower court ruling in December that granted Mamani unrestricted freedom of movement.[30]
    • Amid controversy surrounding Morales's political activism in Peru, President Dina Boluarte withdraws her country's ambassador to Bolivia.[31]
  • 9 January

April

  • 13 April: The government of Bolivia calls on the armed forces to tighten border controls in order to prevent the smuggling of state-subsidized fuel.[37]

October

  • 31 October: Bolivia cut diplomatic relations with Israel.[38]

Deaths

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References

Шаблон:Reflist

External links

Шаблон:Years in Bolivia Шаблон:Year in South America