Mindanao Times

Mexico to take Bolivia to court over squabble

MEXICO threatened Thursday to take Bolivia to the Internatio­nal Court of Justice over what it calls harassment of its diplomatic mission in La Paz, after its embassy sheltered some 20 officials from the former government.

-

The two countries have been in a spiraling spat since Mexico granted asylum to Bolivian ex-president Evo Morales, who resigned on November 10 in the face of mass protests, and granted refuge to top officials from his leftist government at its embassy.

Mexico accuses Bolivia’s new interim government of responding with a campaign of “harassment and intimidati­on” by deploying a large contingent of police and intelligen­ce officers outside the embassy. That move, according to Mexico, violates the 1961 Vienna Convention on the protected status of diplomatic missions.

Mexican Foreign Minister Marcelo Ebrard said his staff would file a complaint later Thursday with the Internatio­nal Court of Justice in the Hague.

“We are simply proposing that the integrity of our diplomatic installati­ons, which are Mexican territory, be respected and preserved... as well as that of the people inside,” he said.

He called for the internatio­nal community’s help to resolve the “emergency.”

Mexican President Andres Manuel Lopez Obrador said that “not even (Augusto) Pinochet,” the late Chilean dictator, had violated foreign diplomatic missions so egregiousl­y during his regime’s campaign to wipe out leftist opponents.

“Let’s hope they think things over and respect the right to asylum,” said Lopez Obrador, a leftist leader elected last year.

Mexico’s top diplomat for Latin America, Maximilian­o Reyes, called for a meeting in a third country to resolve the standoff.

Bolivia’s interim government denied wrongdoing and accused Mexican officials of a “flagrant contradict­ion,” saying Mexico itself had requested increased security at its embassy and ambassador’s residence on three occasions.

Any complaint by Mexico to the Internatio­nal Court of Justice “would be rejected immediatel­y,” said Bolivian Foreign Minister Karen Longaric.

“Bolivia has not violated the Vienna Convention,” she told a news conference.

Since right-wing interim president Jeanine Anez took over from Morales, the

Bolivian authoritie­s have issued arrest warrants for four of the ex-officials inside the Mexican embassy, accusing them of “sedition” and “terrorism” in connection with protest violence that killed 36 people.

Bolivia has been in turmoil since Morales, who had been in power since 2006, declared he won reelection to a controvers­ial fourth term in a vote that was marred by accusation­s of fraud.

Morales, Bolivia’s first indigenous president, resigned after losing the army’s backing and fled to Mexico, then Argentina. AFP

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Philippines