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Thursday, February 08, 2007  
             

 

Morales warns he could throw Shell subisidiary out of Bolivia

02-07-2007, 23h15
LA PAZ (AFP)

photo
A Bolivian soldier stands guard at the Transredes gas and oil transport company in Santa Cruz, in 2006. Socialist President Evo Morales threatened to kick a Shell subsidiary, Transredes, out of Bolivia after demonstrators disrupted natural gas service at the weekend.
(AFP/File)

Socialist President Evo Morales threatened to kick a Shell subsidiary, Transredes, out of Bolivia after demonstrators disrupted natural gas service at the weekend.

Morales said he would order an investigation to determine if Transredes played any direct role in rioting in southeast Camiri which cut off service to four regions for hours before the army ended the protest.

His government says there were losses of half a million dollars.

"We are investigating seriously and if it is shown there was sabotage, I will not hesitate to kick out a multinational that sabotages and conspires against the government," Morales said.

He claimed the company delayed resuming supplies and alleged it had made excuses for doing so.

Transredes has been in Bolivia since 1996 when the former government of Gonzalo Sanchez de Lozada gave it a 40-year contract to manage a gas and oil pipeline.

On February 3 some 3,000 demonstrators demanding that their region benefit from Bolivia's natural gas wealth threatened to take over a gas distribution plant in Camiri, a move that could have disrupted supplies to Brazil.

A local assembly in Camiri, in the eastern province of Santa Cruz, called for a takeover of the local facility belonging to Transredes. The assembly refused to negotiate with Morales.

Bolivia has the second-largest gas reserves in South America, after Venezuela.

In May, Morales declared all foreign oil contracts unconstitutional, unnecessarily favorable to the foreign companies and ordered they be renegotiated, a process he called "nationalization."

The symbolic value of the new contracts was key for Morales, a former legislator representing the interests of Bolivia's poor and one of the leaders behind mass demonstrations that toppled two presidents, largely over oil, gas and the distribution of wealth from those sources.

Bolivia's main joint-venture partners are Petrobras of Brazil, Repsol of Spain, Total of France, British Gas of Britain, Pluspetrol of Argentina and Vintage of the United States.

Brazil and Argentina are the two large purchasers of Bolivian gas.


AFP

 

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