World/AP

[Print]  [Email]        

US extradites 'Minister of Cocaine' to Bolivia to serve time for political killings

By: CARLOS VALDEZ
Associated Press
07/09/09 6:00 PM EDT

LA PAZ, BOLIVIA — The United States deported a key figure in Bolivia's last military dictatorship back home Thursday to serve a 30-year prison sentence for crimes including genocide and political assassinations.

Luis Arce Gomez, 71, known as "the minister of cocaine," took part in the July 1980 coup led by then-Gen. Luis Garcia Meza and backed by drug traffickers. As interior minister, he gained a reputation for ruthlessness for personally torturing political prisoners.

Arce Gomez had been imprisoned in Miami on a 1991 drug-trafficking conviction.

A U.S. judge denied him political asylum after his November 2007 release, a decision that President Evo Morales applauded Thursday.

"I want to recognize the work of the U.S. justice system," Morales told a news conference. "It is a historic day for human rights."

U.S.-Bolivian relations have been strained since Morales, a leftist, former coca-growers' union leader, expelled the U.S. ambassador and U.S. drug agents last year, accusing them of helping incite the pro-autonomy opposition. The U.S. has denied the accusation.

A white-bearded Luis Arce Gomez was escorted by FBI agents after arriving at the El Alto airport early Thursday.

Stepping off the plane, he asked for oxygen to compensate for the 12,500-foot (3,810-meter) altitude. After a medical exam, Arce Gomez was driven to Chonchocoro prison, on La Paz's outskirts.

As Garcia Meza's right-hand man, Arce Gomez rounded up hundreds of journalists, political and labor leaders and church officials, even hiring the late Nazi war criminal Klaus Barbie as an adviser.

Dozens of opposition figures accused of communist sympathies were forcibly disappeared, tortured and assassinated.

The dictatorship only lasted a year, however, and both men fled into exile.

In 1989, Arce Gomez was captured in eastern Bolivia and extradited to the United States, where he was convicted of drug trafficking and sentenced to 30 years. Affidavits from the U.S. Drug Enforcement Administration said he extorted cocaine traffickers while serving as interior minister.

In 1993, a Bolivian court convicted him in absentia of a series of crimes including armed insurrection and genocide. He was sentenced to 30 years without parole.

Garcia Meza, 79, is also serving a 30-year prison term at Chonchocoro prison. He was arrested in 1994 in Brazil after also being convicted in absentia. Garcia Meza has spent much of the last few years in a military hospital.



To view this site, you need to have Flash Player 8.0 or later installed. Click here to get the latest Flash player.


Most Popular Headlines





 


 



 

Reader Comments

All comments on this page are subject to our Terms of Use and do not necessarily reflect the views of the Examiner or its staff. Comment box is limited to 250 words.

Post a comment


Email:
(This will not be displayed or shared. Privacy Policy)

Display Name:

Comment:




Sports

Graphic surveys NFL players concerning concussions

NFL union pans commissioner's call for players to report on teammates' possible concussions

The NFL Players Association opposes commissioner Roger Goodell's call for players to tell their teams' medical staffs if they think a teammate shows symptoms of a concussion, saying that is not an adequate solution. Full story

Economy

NC state treasurer issues gift ban for employees, limits on soliciting for charity

State Treasurer Janet Cowell unveiled new rules Friday banning employees from taking gifts from companies that do substantial business with the agency and setting a limit on charitable solicitations. Full story

Entertainment

Pedro Almodovar discusses his childhood, his influences and what he won't put on film

Sex. Drugs. Prostitution. Pedophilia. Rape. Pedro Almodovar has been able to translate some of the most delicate subjects to the big screen with grace and humor. Full story