US backed coup to tap Bolivia’s lithium, claims Morales


Former Bolivian president Evo Morales maintains that his ouster on November 10 is the result of a coup d’etat. – AFP pic, December 25, 2019.

FORMER Bolivian president Evo Morales told AFP yesterday that he was forced from office by a United States-backed coup d’etat aimed at gaining access to the South American country’s vast lithium resources.

Demand for lithium is expected to grow globally as it is one of the key components in batteries used in high-tech equipment such as laptops and electric cars.

Morales resigned as president on November 10 after almost three weeks of protests against his controversial re-election to an unconstitutional fourth term in polls widely denounced as rigged.

His resignation came after then-chief of the armed forces Gen Williams Kaliman publicly stated the former trade union leader should step down.

But since then, Morales – Bolivia’s first indigenous president – has claimed to have been the victim of a coup d’etat.

“It was a national and international coup d’etat,” Morales told AFP in an exclusive interview in Buenos Aires, where he has been living in exile after claiming asylum.

“Industrialised countries don’t want competition.”

Morales said Washington had not “forgiven” his country for choosing to seek lithium extraction partnerships with Russia and China rather than the US.

“That’s why I’m absolutely convinced it’s a coup against lithium,” he said.

“We as a state had begun industrialising lithium… As a small country of 10 million inhabitants, we were soon going to set the price of lithium.

“They know we have the greatest lithium reserves in the world of 16,000 sq km.”

Bolivia does have the largest confirmed lithium resources in the world but they are widely thought to be of poor quality, and the country lacks the infrastructure to exploit them profitably. – AFP, December 25, 2019.


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