Bolivia reissues warrant after Morales misses trial

Summary

A Bolivian judge reissued an arrest warrant for Evo Morales after he missed the start of his trial on charges of trafficking a minor.

Why this matters

The case has renewed political tensions in Bolivia, where Morales remains an influential figure and his supporters have threatened unrest if he is arrested. It also adds to the legal and political fallout from Morales’s post-presidency struggle to return to office.

A Bolivian judge reissued an arrest warrant for former President Evo Morales on Monday after he did not appear for the start of his trial in Tarija on charges of trafficking a minor.

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

Morales is accused of fathering a child with a 15-year-old girl while in office. The girl’s parents are accused of consenting to the relationship in exchange for favors from Morales. He has denied the accusations.

Morales, Bolivia’s first Indigenous president, governed from 2006 to 2019. He has remained in his coca-growing political stronghold of Chapare since late 2024, guarded by supporters who have said they would resist any attempt to arrest him.

Authorities first issued an arrest warrant for Morales in October 2024, but did not carry it out after his supporters blocked roads for 24 days, preventing officers from reaching the region where he was staying.

A court had already found Morales in contempt in January 2025 after he missed a pretrial detention hearing.

Wilfredo Chavez, one of Morales’s lawyers, told Agence France-Presse on Friday that neither Morales nor his lawyers would appear because they had not been “properly notified.” Chavez said the court had not sent the summons to Morales’s address and instead served it through an edict.

Morales resigned in 2019 after elections tainted by fraud and went into exile in Mexico and later Argentina before returning to Bolivia a year later. He was later barred from seeking a fourth term in last year’s presidential election.

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