Evo Morales
accuses NGO’s of spying for the United States
BOLIVIA.— Bolivian President Evo
Morales has stated that certain non-governmental
organizations are acting as a fifth column for the
United States by passing on information about Latin
America labor and social leaders in exchange for
project funding.
"I am convinced that certain NGO’s
are spying for the United States, not just in
Bolivia but throughout Latin America, because it is
through these NGO’s that the latest information
about social movements and their leaders is known,"
he emphasized.
The President recalled that the
first march of indigenous peoples which arrived in
La Paz demanding that the Isiboro-Sécure Indigenous
Territory and National Park (TIPNIS) should be left
intact, was promoted by the U.S. Agency for
International Development (USAID), PL notes.
The project for a highway passing
through TIPNIS unleashed a conflict among indigenous
communities living in this natural reserve, some of
whom support the construction project and others who
are defending its preservation.
A march led by the Indigenous
Federation of the Bolivian Eastern Region (CIDOB)
arrived in La Paz last October. As the Bolivian
leader commented on more than one occasion, it was
infiltrated by a number of NGO’s and advised by the
U.S. embassy, and finally obtained the passing of
the so-called Ley Corta 180, which vetoed the
projected highway.
For Morales, the mobilization was
headed by leaders who deceived their supporters by
privileging U.S. interests, ABI stated. (Taken from
Juventud Rebelde)