News (Media Awareness Project) - Bolivia: Bolivia Fires Cabinet Minister |
Title: | Bolivia: Bolivia Fires Cabinet Minister |
Published On: | 2000-03-10 |
Source: | Minneapolis Star-Tribune (MN) |
Fetched On: | 2008-09-05 01:01:58 |
BOLIVIA FIRES CABINET MINISTER
LA PAZ, Bolivia (AP) -- Bolivia yielded to what it termed U.S. pressure
Friday and forced the resignation of a Cabinet minister reputed to have
helped get an Italian man acquitted of drug trafficking charges.
The Bolivian government stressed that it had no evidence of wrongdoing by
Information Minister Jorge Landivar, but agreed to ask him to resign in
order to preserve good relations with the United States.
The friction was unusual, considering Bolivia has been a strong ally of
U.S. efforts to fight drug trafficking and has been highly successful in
reducing the country' s cocaine production, currently the third-largest in
Latin America.
Landivar' s forced resignation came two weeks after the U.S. Embassy here
expressed " strong disappointment" over the acquittal two weeks ago of
Italian Marco Marino Diodato, the husband of President Hugo Banzer' s niece
and an honorary officer in the Bolivian army.
" We have no evidence that Minister Landivar influenced the not-guilty
ruling, but the embassy of the United States pressured for him to be
removed from the government, " Interior Minister Walter Guiteras said.
The Bolivian government admitted irregularities occurred in the trial,
criticized the acquittal and appealed the verdict. For his part, Banzer
distanced himself from Diodato, saying there was solid evidence against him
and calling for a full investigation.
Neither government explained how Landivar supposedly interfered with the
trial; but Landivar had publicly said during the trial he thought Diodato
was innocent.
Guiteras said he extensively discussed Landivar' s alleged support for
Diodato with American officials. The U.S. Embassy never made a public
request for his resignation and it refused to comment on whether it had
pressured Bolivia.
Diodato and six others were found innocent of cocaine production and
trafficking by a drug court in the tropical city of Santa Cruz, 560 miles
east of La Paz.
Diodato, 35, was arrested last year after he was caught cloning cellular
cell telephones.
Police also accused him of wiretapping communications among anti-drug
agents, operating cocaine labs and filming government officials and
politicians in sexual encounters with prostitutes, allegedly in order to
blackmail them. Officials said Diodato has links with Italian Mafia.
Diodato' s attorney claimed cocaine labs already existed on a Bolivian farm
when the Italian bought it; the court agreed, saying there was insufficient
evidence against Diodato and the other defendants, who included Italians,
Bolivians and Argentines.
Diodato is held at the Palmasola prison in Santa Cruz, pending additional
charges for intercepting phone calls and operating illegal gambling casinos.
LA PAZ, Bolivia (AP) -- Bolivia yielded to what it termed U.S. pressure
Friday and forced the resignation of a Cabinet minister reputed to have
helped get an Italian man acquitted of drug trafficking charges.
The Bolivian government stressed that it had no evidence of wrongdoing by
Information Minister Jorge Landivar, but agreed to ask him to resign in
order to preserve good relations with the United States.
The friction was unusual, considering Bolivia has been a strong ally of
U.S. efforts to fight drug trafficking and has been highly successful in
reducing the country' s cocaine production, currently the third-largest in
Latin America.
Landivar' s forced resignation came two weeks after the U.S. Embassy here
expressed " strong disappointment" over the acquittal two weeks ago of
Italian Marco Marino Diodato, the husband of President Hugo Banzer' s niece
and an honorary officer in the Bolivian army.
" We have no evidence that Minister Landivar influenced the not-guilty
ruling, but the embassy of the United States pressured for him to be
removed from the government, " Interior Minister Walter Guiteras said.
The Bolivian government admitted irregularities occurred in the trial,
criticized the acquittal and appealed the verdict. For his part, Banzer
distanced himself from Diodato, saying there was solid evidence against him
and calling for a full investigation.
Neither government explained how Landivar supposedly interfered with the
trial; but Landivar had publicly said during the trial he thought Diodato
was innocent.
Guiteras said he extensively discussed Landivar' s alleged support for
Diodato with American officials. The U.S. Embassy never made a public
request for his resignation and it refused to comment on whether it had
pressured Bolivia.
Diodato and six others were found innocent of cocaine production and
trafficking by a drug court in the tropical city of Santa Cruz, 560 miles
east of La Paz.
Diodato, 35, was arrested last year after he was caught cloning cellular
cell telephones.
Police also accused him of wiretapping communications among anti-drug
agents, operating cocaine labs and filming government officials and
politicians in sexual encounters with prostitutes, allegedly in order to
blackmail them. Officials said Diodato has links with Italian Mafia.
Diodato' s attorney claimed cocaine labs already existed on a Bolivian farm
when the Italian bought it; the court agreed, saying there was insufficient
evidence against Diodato and the other defendants, who included Italians,
Bolivians and Argentines.
Diodato is held at the Palmasola prison in Santa Cruz, pending additional
charges for intercepting phone calls and operating illegal gambling casinos.
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