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BUENOS AIRES, June 30 (Xinhuanet) -- Bolivia's interim president Eduardo
Rodriguez has reaffirmed the pledge to call general elections as soon as
possible, according to Argentine media.
In an interview published Thursday by the Argentine daily Clarin, Rodriguez
said that his government is only a transitional administration whose principal
aim is to organize the anticipated elections in a transparent, free and
immediate way.
Many national affairs and international commitments may have tobe put on
hold until the next president is sworn in, he was quoted as saying. But he made
it clear that his government would fulfill its energy commitments to other
countries, including Argentina.
He said Bolivia and Argentina will work together to revive the paralyzed
project of a gas pipeline running through the two countries.
Rodriguez, former president of the Supreme Court, promised general
elections by the end of the year after taking power from former president Carlos
Mesa on June 9. Mesa quit amid weeks of social and political unrest largely over
control of Bolivia's oilfields and natural gas.
The interim government recently ordered the armed forces to take "physical
control" of oilfields, apparently to appease continuing demands for full
nationalization of the industry in theSouth American nation, which has allowed
the operations of foreignmultinationals, such as Britain's BP, Spain's Repsol,
France's Total and Brazil's Petrobras since 1997.
But the move is not widely viewed as an end to the operations of foreign
energy heavyweights. Enditem |