Evo Morales, the unpunished extraditable.

Humberto Vacaflor

By: Humberto Vacaflor - 24/05/2026

Guest columnist.
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It must be admitted, in Bolivia there is a narco-terrorist who is facing a weak government, which he left with a broken economy, with the mercenaries of the most powerful industry that the country has ever had, it is Evo Morales.

The open war began the day after the visit of Major General Philip J. Ryan, commander of the Southern Command of the United States Army, to coordinate with the government of Rodrigo Paz the participation of that unit in the fight against Bolivian drug trafficking.

That day, May 1, Evo Morales, head of the coca growers who produce the raw material for cocaine, broke the secret alliance – an open secret – that he had with the government since it helped him win the elections in 2025.

The war is now in its 23rd day and has paralyzed the country with fifty road blockades and the siege of the city of La Paz, where the blockaders do not allow even oxygen to enter the hospitals, and even prevented the passage of an ambulance carrying a twelve-year-old miner boy, until he died.

The army can do nothing, and this week, when the Minister of Public Works, Mauricio Zamora, was ambushed by Morales' fighters, the military commander denounced that the blockaders have high-caliber weapons of Russian origin.

In La Paz, a city of two million inhabitants, food is scarce and the government is proposing a "humanitarian corridor" to allow essential supplies to pass through, but Morales is not giving in, even though Argentina and Chile have sent planes to help.

Bolivia, with a police force infiltrated by drug traffickers and lacking the necessary equipment, cannot even enter Chapare, where it is said that Hezbollah terrorists left drones for war with the Bolivian state, according to Spanish expert Herman Tertsch in an interview from France.

The national prosecutor's office now reported that the police cannot capture Morales, against whom there are three arrest warrants related to the kidnapping of three 14-year-old girls whom he raped.

But the main charges against the top coca grower relate to drugs, as Brazilian journalist Leonardo Coutinho proved in his book “Hugo Chávez, o espectro”.

It recounts how Bolivian cocaine was transported in Bolivian military planes to the Caracas airport, en route to the United States in an operation by Morales and Hugo Chávez.

Evo Morales is part of the narco-terrorist system and an associate of Nicolás Maduro, who is currently facing charges in the US. During his regime, he protected Mexican drug traffickers, including the son of El Chapo Guzmán, who died in a plane crash in Santa Cruz while taking aviation courses. Drug trafficker Esteban Marset has lived and operated in and from Bolivia during the Morales and Arce administrations, and his arrest by the DEA has sparked a conspiracy.

Two of Morales' anti-narcotics chiefs have been convicted of drug trafficking in the US, and his anti-drug czar, Felipe Cáceres, is being prosecuted for having a cocaine factory on his property.

Evo Morales personally repealed Law 1008, the anti-drug trafficking law, expanded illegal coca cultivation from 3,000 hectares in 2003 when he overthrew President Sánchez de Lozada to potentially 100,000 hectares now. He expelled the DEA and disregarded international anti-narcotics agreements, called for the legalization of cocaine at the UN, followed the Castroist directive that "drug trafficking is an instrument of anti-imperialist struggle," and transformed Bolivia into a narco-state within the system led by Cuba and Venezuela.

In Bolivia, the legal economy needs the rule of law and is faced with mercenaries from the illegal economy, paid by the Chapare Cartel whose boss is Morales and the Colombian, Brazilian and Paraguayan mafias that operate in the national parks with their coca and cocaine.

The Southern Command acted in Ecuador last February and in two weeks captured 90% of the drug traffickers in that country, almost all of them Colombian.

President Daniel Noboa had said last year that his country did not have the strength to defend itself against the transnational drug trafficking organization, and asked that someone come to its aid.

That wish came true, and now Ecuador has to finish the job of banishing the remaining drug traffickers from power.

Bolivia, with a police force infiltrated by drug traffickers and lacking the necessary equipment, cannot even enter Chapare, and neither does the army dare.

The OAS expressed its concern, but above all, the neighboring countries, with the exception of Brazil.

The war of the narco-terrorists against Bolivia is very clear, even though some do not want to see it.

It is a drug trafficking issue in which the "boss Evo Morales" is an unpunished extraditable who defies the Shield of the Americas from Bolivia to continue exporting drugs.


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