Bolivia to sue Hungarian journalist for complicity in plot

LA PAZ (Reuters) – Bolivia will sue a  Hungarian  journalist for allegedly covering up a plan to destabilize the country by a man killed in a police raid last week and accused  of plotting to assassinate President Evo Morales.In an interview last September, Bolivian Eduardo Rozsa told Hungarian reporter Andras Kepes that he would travel to Bolivia to support a separatist movement in Santa Cruz province, where opposition to leftist leader Morales is fiercest.

The interview was broadcast on Hungarian television only after Rozsa — who also held Hungarian and Croatian passports — died in the police raid on a Santa Cruz hotel, along with two alleged fellow conspirators, an Irishman and a Romanian.

Bolivia’s deputy minister for social movements, Sacha  Llorenti, accused Kepes on Friday of keeping a “complicit  silence” by sitting on the interview for seven months.

“Those who cover up situations related to acts of terrorism should be charged and sanctioned,” he told a late-night news conference, citing international laws.

“The attitude of this Hungarian journalist has been to cover up a situation that undermines our country’s security. As a result, Bolivia will take all the appropriate legal actions both domestically and internationally to ensure this does not go unpunished,” Llorenti said. Kepes told the BBC on Wednesday that Rozsa had asked to keep the interview a secret, saying it would serve to explain his motivations if he were to die later.

Bolivian police also killed Irishman Michael Dwyer and  Romanian-Hungarian citizen Arpad Magyarosi in the raid that has  drawn criticism at home and abroad.

Two other men, whom local media identified as a Bolivian  and a Hungarian-Croatian, were also arrested in the police  operation. Authorities said sniper rifles, high-calibre guns and explosives were confiscated in a nearby building.

The Irish and Hungarian governments have questioned the Bolivian account that the men had plotted to kill Morales and other leading public figures to create a “spiral of violence” that would destabilize Bolivia.

Four of Bolivia’s nine provinces voted last year for  greater autonomy from the central government, underscoring a  sometimes violent power struggle between the mostly indigenous  Western highlands — represented by Morales — and wealthier  eastern regions.

Opposition leaders in eastern, resource-rich Santa Cruz  province have called the supposed plot an “international show,”  condemning the police action as an “execution” despite  government assurances that the men were killed in a shootout.