Bolivia's Senate approved a bill that could open the door to new elections without ex-president Evo Morales, as the caretaker government prepared to meet with protesters to end weeks of unrest.

At least 32 people have been killed in violence that erupted after a disputed election on October 20, with blockades causing severe fuel and food shortages in La Paz and other cities.

The Senate approved the proposed law after an hours-long session that began Saturday morning.

It is now before the lower house, which is expected to vote on the bill. Interim president Jeanine Anez will need to sign it before it can become law.

Among other things, the bill annuls the results of the October 20 vote and allows for new elections to be held. 

Crucially, it also bars candidates who served in both of the two previous terms from seeking re-election for the same position. That would prevent Morales from contesting the presidency in the new ballot.  

Congress also needs to agree on a new seven-member electoral court, after members of the previous panel were removed for allegedly manipulating results.

New elections are seen as crucial to ending Bolivia's worst political upheaval in 16 years, which has deepened divisions between indigenous people loyal to Morales and Bolivia's mainly city-dwelling middle and upper classes. 

Morales' Movement for Socialism party holds a majority in both houses of Congress, but is divided over the left-wing leader and his political future. 

Morales, who had been seeking a fourth term, claimed he won last month's election, but opposition groups said the vote count was rigged. 

An audit by the Washington-based Organization of American States found irregularities in the results.

'Pacify the country'

The Senate vote comes a day after the caretaker government filed a criminal complaint accusing Morales - Bolivia's first indigenous president who served for nearly 14 years - of "sedition and terrorism," after he allegedly called on supporters to maintain blockades. 

If Morales - who fled to Mexico after resigning on November 10 - were charged and convicted, he would face a maximum penalty of 30 years in jail.

His former top minister Juan Ramon Quintana, whose whereabouts are unknown, is also accused of the same crimes.

Morales, who claims to have been a victim of a coup after losing the support of the security forces, tweeted Friday -- several hours before Interior Minister Arturo Murillo referred the case to federal prosecutors -- that the investigation was based on "planted evidence and manipulated recordings."

Two children of Morales -- Evaliz Morales Alvarado and Alvaro Morales Peredo -- left Bolivia on Saturday for Argentina after being given the green light by the interim government, Murillo tweeted.

Morales tweeted on Saturday that Evaliz had been accused of "illicit enrichment," which he said was a lie.

Right-wing senator Anez, who declared herself caretaker leader last week after Morales quit, on Friday called on anti-government protesters to "let us govern" and lift the road blocks.

In a potential breakthrough in the crisis, the government announced late Friday that it would meet with various opposition groups at the presidential palace on Saturday at 2000 GMT.

They hope to strike an agreement to "pacify the country," Public Works Minister Yerko Nunez told reporters. 

The situation began to normalize on Saturday, with fuel supplies reaching some gas stations. 

It comes after police on Thursday tear-gassed indigenous protesters who marched on La Paz with the coffins of five of the eight people killed in clashes at a key fuel plant Tuesday.

The United States has suggested that Morales stay out of upcoming elections, which should be "free, fair and transparent."

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