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Argentine former soccer star Diego
Maradona (L) hugs Bolivian President Evo Morales at the presidential
palace in La Paz, March 16, 2008. Maradona visited Bolivia to support
Bolivia against FIFA who recently introduced a ban on international soccer
matches over 2,750 metres above sea level without acclimatization. La Paz
is situated at 3,600 metres above sea level. (Xinhua/Reuters Photo) Photo Gallery>>>
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LIMA, March 17 (Xinhua) -- Bolivian president Evo Morales
and Argentine soccer celebrity Diego Armando Maradona played a charity game in
Bolivia's administrative capital La Paz on Monday to raise money for flood-hit
Bolivians, according to news reaching here on Monday.
The match, at the Hernan Siles Suazo Stadium, at
3,600 meters above sea level, also served to protest the sport's governing
body's decision to restrict international soccer matches to venues below 2,750
meters above sea level, which bars most of Bolivia.
"We have shown them that we can run on this pitch,"
Maradona said at the end of the first half, "We are doing charity work to a
people that has been pummeled by nature."
Maradona was part of a team that included Argentines
Diego Latorre, Esteban Pogany and Matias Almeyda. Morales led a team that
included his ministers, bodyguards and former soccer stars Marco "Diablo"
Echeverry, Erwon Sanchez and Milton Melgar, all three of whom were in 1994's
World Cup in the United States.
During half time, Morales gave Maradona the
Libertador Simon Bolivar Civil Merit medal and gave him a Bolivian national
soccer team shirt.
The money raised by the match will go to support
those who suffered from La Nina, the weather phenomenon that lead to severe
flooding and left nearly 100,000 people homeless, flooded productive land and
drowned hundreds of cattle.