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News > Bolivia

'The Struggle Doesn't End Here': President Evo Morales

  • During his 14 years in power, Morales implemented policies that promoted steady growth and government investment in social spending.

    During his 14 years in power, Morales implemented policies that promoted steady growth and government investment in social spending. | Photo: teleSUR

Published 26 November 2019
Opinion

The president who was granted asylum in Mexico gave a speech during a meeting with students of the National Autonomous University of Mexico.

Bolivia’s exiled President Evo Morales reaffirmed Tuesday that "the struggle does not end here," referring to the Nov. 10 coup and the establishment of a right-wing government in the South American nation.

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The president who was granted asylum in Mexico gave a speech during a meeting with students of the National Autonomous University of Mexico (UNAM), in which also participated Vice President Alvaro Garcia Linera and Minister of Health Gabriela Montaño.

"It hurts [to see] so many lost families and how they [the right] are destroying what we have built for the economic liberation," Morales expressed, deploring the death of more than 30 people, as well as the dozens of wounded as a result of the disproportionate repressions carried out against protesters by the armed and security forces.

The president reminded the assistance that when he assumed the presidency, the country had a high rate of extreme poverty, basic services were almost all privatized and economic development was not as advanced.

He recalled that the country's Gross Domestic Product (GDP) represented US$9 billion when he won the elections for the first time, while it exceeds today US$ 49 billion, allowing for a better redistribution of wealth among Bolivians.

"Of the 13 years of government we led, Bolivia was during six years the first country in economic growth in the region,” the president said.

The head of state also denounced the neoliberal interests of the political actors that carried out the coup, as well as the “fascist and racist” practices of the right-wing political factions towards the Indigenous communities, and the violent attacks against the Movement toward Socialism's (the president's party) supporters, who keep protesting in the streets against the new self-proclaimed government. 

The president also reminded the assistance of the state of the country under former right-wing presidents who studied in the United States to go back home and apply their neoliberal policies, steal the natural resources, and dominate and subdue the people in order to be the loyal to the U.S. policies in the region.

Morales went on recalling how his three consecutive governments brought power and dignity to the marginalized groups in a country that what characterized by high levels of inequalities and segregation. 

During his 14 years in power, he implemented policies that promoted steady growth and government investment in social spending.

The nationalizations and fights against the privatization allowed the transfer of revenue into the hands of the government which was able to inject that money in public infrastructure.

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