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The interim president of Bolivia, Jeanine Áñez, denounced this Wednesday before the UN General Assembly that Argentina exercises “systematic and abusive harassment” against you with Evo Morales in the middle.
“What is the authority that the Argentine government has to make interference the key to its foreign policy towards Bolivia and what is the authority it has to protect a violent conspiracy by Evo Morales against Bolivian democracy “, the transitional president asked in a recorded speech.
Áñez questioned an alleged authority that the Argentine government would throw itself to “to offer impunity” to Evo Morales, who has been in Argentina since last December.
The former Bolivian president faces criminal proceedings before the Bolivian Justice “for violation of human rights, for sexual violations against girls or underage women,” Áñez stressed. he referred to Morales as a “former dictator.”
“Kirchnerist populism knows that the Bolivian nation is not the private property of any caste, Bolivian democracy is respected, the Bolivian people are respected “, emphasized the transitional Bolivian president.
Áñez said that the case of the relationship with Argentina “is different” unlike Cuba, a country with which he admitted that there are ideological differences but there is a link with “due respect and courtesy.”
The acting head of state compared the actions of the Argentine government with those of the “populist castes”, since she considered that it uses “downright abusive methods to support their plans, power and their positions contrary to freedom. “
The interim government of Bolivia maintains a relationship with many frictions from the moment the former president arrived in that country to apply for refuge at the end of last year, from where the Movement Towards Socialism acts as campaign manager for his party for the October elections in Bolivia.
At the beginning of his speech, Áñez mentioned that the paths ahead of Latin America are not those of the left or right, statism or neoliberalism, nor socialism or capitalism, but rather that of choose between “freedom” and “oppression”.
“Let us admit that Latin America has not overcome the authoritarian threat” and that the threat of “projects of caudillista and authoritarian populism” remains, he emphasized.
Áñez invited the countries of the world to observe the electoral process on October 18 in Bolivia, which he said will be “clean and without fraud.”
In the final part of her speech, the interim president of Bolivia referred to the centennial maritime lawsuit before Chile for sovereign access to the Pacific Ocean, with a “call to the international community” to solve pending issues through negotiation.