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Op-Ed Contributors

The Hypocrisy of Evo Morales

José Miguel Vivanco and

A supporter of President Evo Morales of Bolivia in Cochabamba, in October.Credit...David Mercado/Reuters

BUENOS AIRES — President Evo Morales of Bolivia seems obsessed with staying in power.

In 2016, he called a referendum on a constitutional amendment that would have eased term limits in the country’s Constitution and allowed him to run for a fourth time.

After 51 percent of the voters rejected the amendment, President Morales came up with a new plan. In September, his supporters in Congress brought a lawsuit in the Plurinational Constitutional Tribunal seeking to revoke the Constitution’s term limit.

Mr. Morales had already brought a lawsuit to the high court in 2013 to bypass the two-term limit. That time the constitutional court concluded that the president’s first term, from 2006 to 2010, did not count because it took place before the 2009 Constitution came into force.

Now Mr. Morales’s supporters claim that the term limit discriminates against the president and undermines his political rights under regional human rights standards. They rely on a provision in the American Convention on Human Rights, the main human rights treaty in the Americas, which says that political rights can “only” be limited under very specific circumstances.

The interpretation they promote seems far-fetched. The clause was designed in 1969 to prevent abusive governments from arbitrarily barring opposition candidates, not to impede constitutional re-election limits designed to prevent the rise of autocrats.

Many Latin American politicians have bypassed term limits, at times undermining the rule of law in the process.

Álvaro Uribe of Colombia amended the Constitution to seek a second term and, in 2010, sought a referendum to put a third term to a vote. The Constitutional Court stopped him. Yet many in Colombia believe that by lifting the presidential mandate once, Mr. Uribe undermined the checks and balances in the Colombian Constitution that were designed to ensure that presidents are held in check by officials nominated by their predecessors.

Similarly, Hugo Chávez of Venezuela managed to eliminate term limits in 2009. At the time, he was also busy with a larger project of dismantling the checks on his power. So much damage had already been done that a few months later, the Supreme Tribunal he had packed with his supporters issued a ruling that dismissed the separation of powers as an “instrument” established to “protect individualist interests of the ruling class.”

Mr. Chávez died of cancer in 2013, but had he survived he would probably still rule Venezuela. The erosion of checks and balances he carried out has enabled his successor, Nicolás Maduro, to go further still so that he is now able to intimidate, censor and punish his critics with impunity.

In 2015, Rafael Correa promoted a constitutional reform to allow indefinite re-election in Ecuador. After mass protests he had to compromise by ensuring that the new provision could apply only to future presidents. Yet he warned that if the opposition won the 2017 presidential race, Congress could call for new elections, and he would “run again and win.” Mr. Correa’s candidate, Lenín Moreno, won and is surprisingly among the few presidents in the Americas who have sought to establish term limits where they are lacking.

What makes Mr. Morales’s strategy unusual, however, is that he has the nerve to invoke human rights to cling to power.

There is transparent hypocrisy in his argument that international human rights law bars the Constitution’s term limits. In the past Mr. Morales’s administration has frequently contended that sovereignty should trump rights.

In 2013, the Bolivian president said that the Inter-American Commission on Human Rights was an “instrument of domination” and that he would consider abandoning it. More recently, after Secretary General Luis Almagro of the Organization of American States tweeted that the results of Bolivia’s 2016 referendum should be respected, the Bolivian justice minister, Héctor Arce, accused Mr. Almagro of trying to “trample the sovereignty of Bolivia.”

Yet Mr. Morales’s move is not unheard of. In 2009, Daniel Ortega of Nicaragua also played the human rights card. He successfully brought a lawsuit to the country’s Supreme Court of Justice to lift the term limits set forth in his own country’s Constitution. Mr. Ortega ruled in Nicaragua throughout the 1980s and has won two re-elections since he regained the presidency in 2007. When his current term ends, he will have had 24 years in power.

Mr. Arce, the justice minister, has promised O.A.S. members that Bolivia’s constitutional court would rule with “absolute independence and liberty.” Yet doubts remain. The sitting magistrates were appointed in 2011 through a widely criticized process that was controlled by government supporters in Congress.

President Morales himself seems to have little regard for the judicial independence his justice minister promised the O.A.S. A day after lawmakers brought the claim before the constitutional court, he said that “the so-called ‘judicial independence’ is at the service of the United States empire” and is a “doctrine of the United States.”

Bolivians have taken the controversy to the streets. In October, hundreds protested in La Paz against Mr. Morales’s move. And his supporters took to the streets earlier this month calling for his re-election. The president said a day later that if he were allowed to run, he would “win by more than 70 percent” and bring the country closer to “true democracy.”

Yet Mr. Morales has progressively undermined many of the checks and balances that are cornerstones of any functional democracy. In 2013 he signed a decree that grants the government wide latitude to interfere with the operation of independent civil society groups. And since 2016 his administration has been pursuing a troubling reform to the judiciary that poses a serious risk to judicial independence in the country.

After years of silence, in 2017 leaders across the Americas spoke up against the grave abuses of President Maduro’s authoritarian government in Venezuela. Yet efforts to hold presidents in the region from moving toward autocracy could be much more effective if governments reacted as the checks and balances are being dismantled, rather than wait until the situation becomes a crisis.

José Miguel Vivanco is the Americas director at Human Rights Watch. Juan Pappier is an Americas researcher at Human Rights Watch.

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A version of this article appears in print on  , Section A, Page 9 in The New York Times International Edition. Order Reprints | Today’s Paper | Subscribe

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