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'Satan, be gone!': Bolivian Christians claim credit for ousting Evo Morales

Luis Fernando Camacho, an ultra-conservative Catholic activist and probable presidential candidate, delivers a speech in Santa Cruz, Bolivia, brandishing a Bible and flanked by a statue of the Virgin Mary.

The fast-growing religious right – both Catholic and Protestant – see the president’s exit as a first step in transforming the country, leaving many indigenous Bolivians horrified

Luis Aruquipa Carlo, a hardline pastor from the de facto capital, La Paz, has other ideas.
“The glory is God’s,” proclaimed the evangelical leader who heads a conservative coalition of Bolivian churches called the National Christian Council.

Aruquipa claimed that in the hours before Morales’s flight to Mexico the leftist received a divine decree: “Pharaoh, leave Bolivia in peace!


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