LIMA, Feb. 11 (Xinhua) -- Bolivian President Evo Morales declared U.S.
embassy official Vincent Cooper an "undesirable person" Monday, citing charges
that Cooper was trying to organize a spy ring, according to news reaching here.
"This man has not only violated the rights of his own citizens, but is also
violating, offending and attacking a nation like Bolivia," Morales said during a
speech to start the academic year at a school for sergeants in the Bolivian
province of Cochabamba.
Morales said Cooper had asked scholarship holders and Peace Corps
volunteers to spy on Cubans and Venezuelans living in Bolivia.
"From the moment that this mistake was discovered, he became an undesirable
person for Bolivia and for the Bolivian government," he said.
Fulbright Foundation scholar Alexander Van Schaick told Bolivian Foreign
Minister David Choquehuanca and a U.S. broadcaster that during a November
meeting at the U.S. embassy, he had been asked to become a spy.
"They told me to give them the names, addresses and activities of any
doctor or worker from Venezuela or Cuba that crosses my path during my stay
here," Van Shaick said.
The U.S. embassy in the Bolivian capital La Paz said that a member of its
security staff had met U.S. volunteers and made what it described as "an
inappropriate suggestion." It added that more senior staff had immediately
corrected the official.
Bolivia's armed forces have the obligation to safeguard the nation's
integrity and image and also the nation's dignity, Morales said, adding that
Bolivia would continue its foreign relations but was strongly opposed to those
nations that use students and volunteers as spies.