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Bolivia issues warrant for Evo Morales’s arrest after court no-show

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The ex-Bolivian president is on trial for allegedly fathering a child with a 15-year-old girl while in office.

A Bolivian judge has found former President Evo Morales in contempt of court and reissued a warrant for his arrest after he failed to turn up for the start of his trial on charges of trafficking a minor.

The ruling on Monday renewed tensions in the South American country, with supporters of Morales warning they would “throw the country into turmoil” if the former leader is arrested.

Morales, who is Bolivia’s first Indigenous president, is accused of fathering a child with a 15-year-old girl while in office. The parents of the teen are accused of consenting to the relationship in exchange for favours from Morales.

The former socialist leader, who governed from 2006 to 2019, has rejected the accusations.

Morales did not attend the scheduled start of his trial on Monday in the southern city of Tarija, forcing the proceedings to be suspended.

The Public Prosecutor’s Office said Morales’s “unjustified absence” confirmed his fugitive status and warranted an arrest order as well as a travel ban.

The former president has been hiding from the law in his central coca-growing stronghold of Chapare since late 2024, guarded by Indigenous supporters who have promised to resist any attempt to capture him.

“They think that by arresting Evo Morales, they will succeed in quelling and demobilising the movement. They are very much mistaken,” supporter Dieter Mendoza said on Kawsachun Coca radio on Monday. “If they touch Evo Morales, this will cause an upheaval … There will be an insurgency across Bolivia.”

Mendoza urged residents of the Cochabamba Tropics to remain on “high alert” and “ready for battle”.

Authorities first issued an arrest warrant for Morales in October 2024, but could not execute it after his supporters blocked roads for 24 days, preventing officers from reaching the region where he remains sheltered.

Morales was already declared in contempt of court in January 2025, when he did not show for a pretrial detention hearing.

Wilfredo Chavez, one of his lawyers, told the AFP news agency on Friday that neither Morales nor his lawyers would show up in court, as they had not been “properly notified”.  The lawyer said the court did not send the summons to Morales’s address, but had instead served it through an edict.

Morales, who rose from dire poverty to become one of Latin America’s longest-serving leaders, has slammed those “that persecute me and condemn me in record time”.

His refusal to give up power in 2019 after three terms led to a tumultuous exit that cast a shadow over nearly 14 years of economic progress and poverty reduction.

Forced to resign after elections tainted by fraud, he slipped away into exile in Mexico and later Argentina, but returned home a year later.

He failed to make a comeback last year after being barred from seeking a fourth term in presidential elections.

📰 மூல செய்தி (Source): https://www.aljazeera.com/news/2026/5/12/bolivia-issues-warrant-for-evo-moraless-arrest-after-court-no-show?traffic_source=rss

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Haiti’s PM casts doubt on presidential vote by August as gang clashes grow

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Alix Didier ⁠Fils-Aime says Haiti is too unstable for elections as a new wave of violence forces hospital evacuations.

Haiti’s Prime Minister Alix Didier ⁠Fils-Aime has said the security situation in the Caribbean nation is not stable enough to hold presidential elections scheduled for August.

Fils-Aime’s comments on Monday came as clashes between rival gangs escalated in Haiti’s capital, Port-au-Prince, forcing hospitals to evacuate patients and hundreds of people to flee their homes.

Haiti has not held elections since 2016, with successive governments delaying polls as powerful armed gangs cemented their control over the capital.

The violence has killed thousands of people and displaced more than a million, limiting the ability of authorities to guarantee a free and fair voting process.

“It is clear that the security conditions ⁠are not met at the level for us to have elections in August,” Fils-Aime told the editor-in-chief of Haiti’s oldest newspaper, Le Nouvelliste, in an interview broadcast on Magik9 radio.

“I would like for elections to happen by the end of the year,” he added. “On February 7, we would have an elected president.”

Fils-Aime took over from ‌a transitional presidential council on February 7 this year.

The country’s electoral council had scheduled a first-round vote for August 30 and a run-off vote for December. More than 280 ⁠political parties were approved to compete.

Haiti’s last president, Jovenel Moise, was assassinated in 2021 after he put off organising elections. His murder left a political vacuum that allowed already powerful gangs to extend their influence over almost all of Port-au-Prince.

Efforts by authorities to quell the fighting and curb the influence of criminal groups have largely proven ineffective, while the United Nations and the United States have tied their commitments to support Haiti’s security forces to the government holding elections.

In Port-au-Prince on Monday, Doctors Without Borders, known by its French initials MSF, announced the evacuation of its hospital in the neighbourhood of Cite Soleil following intense clashes there on Sunday.

MSF reported having treated more than 40 gunshot victims within 12 hours while providing temporary shelter to 800 people fleeing the violence. One of those injured was a security guard, who was hit by a stray bullet in the hospital grounds.

Another hospital in the area, Fontaine Hospital, told the Reuters news agency that it had evacuated newborns from its intensive care unit. MSF said it treated some patients who transferred from Fontaine, including pregnant women who gave birth overnight.

“Currently, not a single hospital is open in the area where the fighting is taking place,” MSF said in a statement. While local medical needs were growing ‌exponentially, MSF said it could not protect its staff or patients in the midst of gunfire, which “has not stopped” since Sunday morning.

Monique Verdieux, 56, who fled to a highway after watching armed men burning houses in her neighbourhood, told The Associated Press news agency that she is not sure where members of her family are after they scattered in different directions.

“I am now sleeping in the street,” Verdieux said, noting that it was unsafe to return.

Local business leaders said the fighting near the capital’s port and just a few kilometres from its international airport involved the Chen Mechan gang, its partners, and their former allies. The groups had all been part of a broad ⁠alliance known as Viv Ansanm, a coalition of hundreds of armed gangs across the capital.

According to a report published earlier this year by the International Organization for Migration, gang violence has displaced more than 1.4 million people in Haiti. About 200,000 of them are now living in crowded and underfunded sites in the nation’s capital.

The ⁠renewed violence comes after the last members of a Kenyan-led mission in Haiti left the country as part of a restructuring of a UN-backed force mandated to help restore security in the country.

The mission had been hamstrung by a lack of troops, funds and equipment. It had also faced sexual abuse accusations.

The UN’s new plan aims to deploy ‌some 5,500 new troops in Haiti by the end of October, but it is not clear where all of the troops will come from or who will fund their operations.

Chad’s government said in April that it plans to send 1,500 personnel to Haiti and that some 400 have already been deployed.

📰 மூல செய்தி (Source): https://www.aljazeera.com/news/2026/5/11/hundreds-displaced-medical-services-suspended-amid-gang-violence-in-haiti?traffic_source=rss

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Iran war live: Trump slams Iranian proposal as ceasefire hangs by a thread

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Iran's powerful parliamentary speaker says US has 'no alternative but to accept' Tehran's 14-point proposal to end war.

📰 மூல செய்தி (Source): https://www.aljazeera.com/news/liveblog/2026/5/12/iran-war-live-trump-slams-iranian-proposal-as-ceasefire-hangs-by-a-thread?traffic_source=rss

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Roads blocked in Bolivia as protesters demand president’s resignation

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Roads blocked in Bolivia as protesters demand president's resignation

Bolivia faces growing unrest as widespread road blockades disrupt travel across major cities including La Paz and El Alto. Protesters are demanding the resignation of President Rodrigo Paz amid fuel shortages, rising costs, and wage disputes.

📰 மூல செய்தி (Source): https://www.aljazeera.com/video/newsfeed/2026/5/12/aje-onl-nf_clip_bolivia-protesters-demand-president-resign-110526?traffic_source=rss

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