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News > Latin America

Mexico Accuses Bolivia of Intimidating Its Diplomats in La Paz

  • An unusual amount of Bolivian police and intelligence officers were denounced to post outside the Mexican diplomatic premises in La Paz on Dec. 23.

    An unusual amount of Bolivian police and intelligence officers were denounced to post outside the Mexican diplomatic premises in La Paz on Dec. 23. | Photo: teleSUR

Published 23 December 2019
Opinion

Mexico expressed its growing concern about the excessive presence of Bolivian security forces guarding both the residence and the Mexican Embassy.

Mexico’s Foreign Affairs Ministry said Monday that it was “deeply concerned” about “excessive” surveillance of the Mexican ambassador’s residence and Mexican embassy in Bolivia by about 150 Bolivian intelligence and security service personnel.

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Mexico said the Bolivians were “intimidating” diplomatic staff and attempted to “detain and inspect” the ambassador’s vehicle on Monday. While the Undersecretary for Latin America and the Caribbean of the Mexican Foreign Ministry Maximiliano Reyes Zuñiga warned that the Bolivian de-facto government's illegal activities are not in compliance with the Vienna Convention. 

"We repudiate that the de facto government in the style of the military dictatorship violates the Vienna Convention on Diplomatic Relations by enclosing the Mexican residence with police officers and using drones that violate their airspace to intimidate and endanger the security of the asylees," exiled Bolivian President Evo Morales tweeted on Monday.  

More specifically, Mexico demanded the foreign government to respect the obligations of the Bolivian State described in article 22 of the Vienna Convention on Diplomatic Relations, which establishes that the buildings or properties of diplomatic missions are inviolable and that agents of the host state may not enter them without the consent of the head of the mission.

Venezuela rejects and denounces the police siege of the Mexican Embassy in La Paz, Bolivia. Respect for the inviolability of diplomatic premises is an essential principle contemplated in the Vienna Convention on Diplomatic Relations.
 

The international agreement also states that the host state has a special obligation to take all appropriate measures to protect the mission against any intrusion or damage and to avoid disturbing the tranquillity of the mission or impairing its dignity. Furthermore, the premises of the mission and its property may not be searched, detained, or subjected to any measure of execution.

According to teleSUR's correspondent in Bolivia Freddy Morales, the current presence of two groups of police, one of four and one of six officers, outside the Mexican embassy is "quite unusual." There was also a police vehicle parked and two more arrived shortly after, a level of surveillance that does not happen in other embassies or diplomatic residences. 

The Bolivian authorities on the scene haven't spoken to the press but it was known that in the morning there were moving trucks coming and going from embassy due to an alleged move. 

The incident might have attracted the attention of the Bolivian police as the Mexican embassy currently offers asylum to about 20 members of Evo Morales' government.  

Mexico’s leftist President Andres Manuel Lopez Obrador granted asylum to Morales after the right-wing coup pushed the Indigenous president to resign. Ever since AMLO, and other progressive governments of the region, have been “reluctant” to recognize the self-proclaimed President Jeanine Añez as the rightful leader.

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