Evo Morales Heads to Cuba Amid Talk of an Eventual Comeback (Then Argentina)


Orinoco Tribune – News and opinion pieces about Venezuela and beyond
From Venezuela and made by Venezuelan Chavistas

Boliviaâs toppled president flies out of Mexico for what his former health minister says is a medical appointment.
Boliviaâs recently toppled president, Evo Morales, has left Mexico for Cuba as part of what some observers suspect is the first step in a bid to stage a dramatic political comeback.
On Friday night, less than a month after being forced into exile in Mexico, Morales flew out of the country on a plane bound for Havana.
Mexicoâs foreign relations ministry confirmed that Morales had left for Cuba on Friday, on what it called a temporary visit.
RELATED CONTENT: Indians Shall Not Govern
The Mexican newspaper El Universal said official sources had confirmed Moralesâ departure for the communist-run Caribbean island.
Last month a commentator from the same newspaper, Salvador GarcĂa Soto, had predicted Boliviaâs first indigenous president would relocate to another Latin American country âwhere he would be able to organise his resistance plan and strategy to attempt to return to Bolivia to recover power in the near futureâ.
Morales touched down in Mexico on 12 November after Mexicoâs leftist leader, AndrĂ©s Manuel LĂłpez Obrador, sent an airforce plane to rescue him from the South American country he had governed since 2006.
Morales fled Bolivia after being forced to resign on 10 November in what political foes celebrated as a popular uprising against an increasingly authoritarian leader but which Moralesâ supporters branded a right-wing coup dâĂ©tat.
âIt is a racist coup,â Sacha Llorenti, Moralesâ former ambassador to the United Nations, said in a recent interview.
RELATED CONTENT: How Middle Class Bolivia Learned to Stop Worrying and Love the Coup
On Friday, Spainâs El PaĂs reported that Morales was also unlikely to spend much time in Cuba and instead planned to relocate to Argentina once that countryâs new leftist leader, Alberto FernĂĄndez, took office next week.
The Mexican newspaper Reforma said Morales had travelled to Cuba with his former vice president, Ălvaro GarcĂa Linera, and his former health minister, Gabriela Montaño. âPresident Evo Morales is in Cuba for a medical appointment with the Cuban medical team that treated him in Bolivia,â Montano told Reuters.
In a recent interview with the Guardian in Mexico City, Morales hinted that his political aspirations had not ended with exile.
âStruggle, struggle, struggle, struggle, that is where I come from,â he said.
For now, a return to Bolivia looks highly unlikely. Morales has ruled out taking part in a fresh round of presidential elections, called as a result of suspicions of vote rigging in his favour.
Last month the interior minister of Boliviaâs rightwing interim government vowed to jail Morales for the rest of his life for allegedly inciting anti-government protests that he claimed amounted to terrorism.
âAny terrorist should spend the rest of their life in prison â any terrorist â Evo Morales or whoever. Itâs not about whether youâre an ex-president or white or black or a campesino ⊠In fact, itâs even worse when itâs an ex-president,â Arturo Murillo said.
Featured image: Evo Morales arrived in Mexico after receiving political asylum, and has now headed to Cuba. Photograph: Mario Guzman/EPA