UPDATED ON:
Wednesday, April 15, 2009
16:04 Mecca time, 13:04 GMT
News Americas
Morales ends hunger strike

Morales and supporters spend days sleeping
on mattresses in the presidential palace
 [EPA]

Evo Morales, the Bolivian president, has ended his five-day hunger strike after Bolivia's congress approved a new election law.

The law permits Morales to stand again for election on December 6, reserves 14 congressional seats for indigenous candidates and permits expatriates to vote.

The Bolivian president spent several nights on a mattress on the floor of Bolivia's presidential palace, surrounded by banners and supporters and chewing coca leaves to ward off hunger after beginning the strike.

Recent polls suggest that Morales, the Andean nation's first indigenous president and a critic of the United States who has yet to announce his candidacy, will most likely win re-election.

Vote concerns

Morales has championed the rights of Bolivia's
indigenous peoples since entering office [AFP]
Morales's Movement Toward Socialism, or MAS party, had enough votes to ratify the bill in the lower house and senate, but the opposition had refused to grant the quorum needed for a vote.

MAS controls the lower chamber, but opposition parties have used their slim majority in the senate to block dozens of government-proposed reforms.

Morales's opponents say the law will give him political advantage because it assigns more seats to the poor, indigenous parts of the country whose rights he has championed since he took office in 2006.

However, a deal was reached after Morales ordered officials to compile a new electoral register, following opposition leaders' claims that he could exploit "flaws" in the existing census to rig the vote.

'Racist' opposition

Morales had earlier condemned the opposition for being "racist, fascist, selfish" in refusing to ratify the law.

He also said that he had received supportive phone calls from Hugo Chavez, the Venezuela president, and Fidel Castro, the former president of Cuba.

Morales, a former coca farmer, has said he once went without food for 18 days in 1998 to protest against the then-government's policy on coca, the raw material for cocaine revered by Bolivian Indians for its medicinal and nutritional properties, Reuters reported.

 Source: Agencies
 
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