Prominent Bolivian opposition leader to be transferred from jail to house arrest
LA PAZ, Bolivia (AP) — Bolivian opposition leader Luis Fernando Camacho won his release to house arrest Wednesday after two years and eight months of pretrial detention, a surprise move that empowered his supporters who long criticized his prosecution as unjust and disheartened his detractors who complained of political pressures overriding procedural tradition.
Wednesday’s court order applied to the last of two cases that landed Camacho, the conservative governor of Bolivia’s easternmost province of Santa Cruz, behind bars pending a trial. He had already been ordered freed to house arrest on Tuesday in the most explosive case, alleging his involvement in violent unrest over the disputed 2019 reelection of socialist former President Evo Morales.
The ruling on a different but related case Wednesday confirmed that the suspended governor would be transferred out of jail to house arrest with work-release privileges, which allow him to resume his duties as governor of Santa Cruz for the first time since his 2022 arrest.
Release to house arrest doesn’t mean acquittal
