Search results
Results From The WOW.Com Content Network
Jeanine Áñez was born on 13 June 1967 in San Joaquín, Beni, [6] the youngest of seven siblings born to two teachers. Áñez spent her childhood in relative rural poverty; San Joaquín, at the time, lacked most essential services, including paved roads.
10 November 2019: Bolivian president Evo Morales was forced to step down under pressure from the military and police, after which Jeanine Añez was installed as new president. There has been debate over whether this constituted a coup or not.
On 29 October 2020, the outgoing parliament approved a report on the "massacres of Senkata, Sacaba and Yapacani, which recommends a judgment of responsibility against Jeanine Anez for genocide and other offenses". Parliament also approved the criminal indictment of 11 of Anez' ministers. [126]
It was followed by Morales' resignation, bloody violence and the year-long interim presidency of Jeanine Anez, a right-wing congresswoman who assumed power after Morales left the country.
Carolina Ribera was born on 1 May 1990 [1] to Tadeo Ribera and Jeanine Áñez.Ribera was raised in the field of politics; her father, Tadeo, served as mayor of their home city of Trinidad, capital of the Beni Department, from 1996 to 1999.
After Mexico granted asylum to leaders of the Movement for Socialism (MAS), Mexican President Andrés Manuel López Obrador called Morales's resignation a coup d'etat and refused to recognize the new government of Jeanine Áñez. [7] [8] A month later Morales moved to Argentina, and the Áñez government issued an arrest warrant for him. [9]
The Interdisciplinary Group of Independent Experts for Bolivia (Grupo Interdisciplinario de Expertos Independientes—Bolivia, GIEI) is a committee of jurists and human rights experts created by the Inter-American Commission on Human Rights (IACHR) to carry out a parallel investigation of human rights violations during the 2019 Bolivian political crisis, covering the period from 1 September ...
El Alto was the site of a particularly large protest, in which multiple people were injured, with crowds chanting, "Now, civil war!" and waving the Wiphala indigenous flag. [84] The acting president, Jeanine Áñez, called for the military to support the police. The head of Bolivia's military said that following reports police have been ...