Cable sobre la pasividad del Gobierno de Bolivia

Según la Embajada en La Paz, "Evo Morales parece preferir apuntarse tantos retóricos a contribuir a la solución"

ID: 247943

Date: 2010-02-09 12:09:00



Origin: 10LAPAZ33

Source: Embassy La Paz

Classification: CONFIDENTIAL

Dunno:

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E.O. 12958: DECL: 2020/02/09

TAGS: SENV, KGHG, PREL, BL

SUBJECT: Morales Continues to Attempt to Derail Copenhagen Accord

CLASSIFIED BY: John S. Creamer, Charge d’Affaires, DOS, La Paz;

REASON: 1.4(B), (D)

1. (C) Summary: Declaring the Copenhagen UN

climate change summit a failure, Bolivian President Morales

announced he will convoke the first "People’s World Conference on

Climate Change and the Mother Earth" in Cochabamba April 20-22 —

coinciding with Earth Day. The conference’s stated objective is to

improve the position of social movements in the climate change

process and develop an alternative work plan to take to the United

Nations. As one of only five countries that did not sign the

Copenhagen Accord (besides Tuvalu, Venezuela, Sudan, and Cuba), the

Bolivian government hopes to raise doubts about the ability of the

UN process to advance the climate change agenda and address the

concerns of the world’s poorest nations. More fundamentally,

Morales views climate change as a vehicle for raising his and

Bolivia’s international political stature, especially among

sympathetic anti-globalization groups. End summary.

2. (C) President Morales seemed to revel in his

high-profile opposition to the UN process at the Copenhagen summit,

ridiculing developed nations’ proposals, making extraordinary

demands for reparations and aid, and alienating the conference

organizers and most delegations. Danish Ambassador to Bolivia

Morten Elkjaer told us Morales canceled most of his bilateral

program at the last moment, including meetings with clean energy

firms, sustainable energy experts, and leading Danish businesses

and labor federations. Danish Prime Minister Rasmussen spent an

unpleasant 30 minutes with Morales, Ambassador Elkjaer said, during

which Morales thanked him for bilateral aid (Denmark provides

Bolivia approximately $30 million a year in aid), but refused to

engage on climate change issues. The Danes said they are "fed up"

with Bolivia and the ALBA countries, who continue to mount legal

and propaganda arguments against the Copenhagen Accord, but that

they will continue to consult with their European Union partners on

ways to influence the GOB position.

3. (C) Chinese DCM in La Paz, Huang Yazhong,

told the Charge that he has raised the Copenhagen Accord twice with

Bolivian MFA Multilateral Affairs director MarC-a Cecilia ChacC3n,

urging the GOB to rethink its radical opposition to the deal.

Noting he had made little progress, the Chinese diplomat suggested

that further engagement was pointless and argued that it is up to

Brazil to bring around Bolivia and the other ALBA countries.

Brazilian officials told us Bolivia refused to adopt Brazil’s

position on Copenhagen at a November 26 meeting in Manaus organized

by President Lula da Silva. Still, Itamaraty official Marcel Biato

(and future Brazilian Ambassador to La Paz) said Brazil will

continue to press Bolivia on Copenhagen, hoping that Bolivia’s

isolation on this issue will eventually bring it around.

4. (C) Gisela Ulloa, a member of Bolivian

delegations to earlier COP meetings (but not COP-15, where she

represented Papua New Guinea and the Coalition for First Nations)

told us the GOB’s position is aimed at creating an alternative

development model consistent with Morales’s anti-capitalist

philosophy. In addition to demanding enormous reparations from

developed nations, the GOB opposes using markets as a mechanism to

reduce emissions. Ulloa suggested that Morales recognizes Bolivia

will not be included in the deliberations of the major players and

is keen to create an alternative forum where he can style himself

as the leader of anti-globalization groups and other social

movements MAS Senator Ana Maria Romero added that Morales sees

environmental issues as one area where he can carve out an

international identity independent from that of his close ally,

President Hugo Chavez. She recounted to us that an animated

Morales told her he was surrounded by well-wishers in Copenhagen

urging him "not to abandon them," while Chavez was alone in the

corner.

5. (C) Many Bolivians are quick to observe that

Morales’s climate change campaign is about enhancing his global

stature, not about the environment. Former Morales Production

Minister and MAS replacement (suplente) Senator Javier Hurtado said

there is a huge gap between Morales’ strident, pro-environmental

rhetoric in international fora and his domestic emphasis on

industrialization as they key to development. The foundation of

this effort is large-scale natural gas, iron, and lithium

production projects, enterprises that have historically proven

extremely damaging to the environment. In fact, the Inter-American

Development Bank has presented a report to the GOB that details the

serious potential for environmental damage in extracting lithium.

6. (C) Comment: Bolivia is already suffering

real damage from the effects of global warming, but Morales seems

to prefer to score rhetorical points rather than contribute to a

solution. This radical position won him plaudits from

anti-globalization groups, but has alienated many developed nations

and most of Bolivia’s neighbors .. Our assessment is that Bolivia

remains beyond reach on Copenhagen, at least until Morales sees the

limits of his approach. End comment.

Creamer