Bolivian priest who blessed Morales found with cocaine

LA PAZ,  (Reuters) – The Aymara priest who blessed  Bolivian President Evo Morales at an inauguration ceremony four  years ago has been arrested in possession of 530 pounds (240  kg) of cocaine, police said yesterday.

Anti-drugs police in the Andean country found a cocaine  laboratory in the home of priest Valentin Mejillones. His son  and a Colombian couple were also detained. The stash of liquid  cocaine seized in the raid was valued at $240,000.

Mejillones told local media he had been tricked by the  Colombians, and Vice President Alvaro Garcia said Morales had  not chosen the priest to preside at the traditional swearing-in  ceremony at the sacred Tiwanaku ruins.

“He was a person who moved within the Andean religious  structure,” Garcia told reporters. “Whether he’s a priest or  not, if he’s committed a crime, he won’t get any kind of  protection when he faces justice.”

Morales, an Aymara Indian and former coca farmer, was sworn  in as Bolivia’s first indigenous president in 2006.     the eve of his inauguration at the presidential palace,  he donned a ceremonial red poncho as Mejillones presented him  with a staff of command representing the 36 nationalities of  Bolivia’s indigenous majority.

Bolivia is the world’s third-biggest cocaine producer, but  limited coca cultivation is legal and leaves of the plant are  commonly chewed or brewed in a tea to ward off the effects of  altitude.