Evo Morales

Latin AmericanĀ leaders have strongly defendedĀ the world’s most impoverished migrants after US President Donald TrumpĀ reportedly referred to certain developingĀ nations as ā€œshitholeĀ countriesā€.

Bolivian President EvoĀ Morales expressed his indignation on Twitter: ā€œTo insult African countries, El Salvador and Haiti, Trump insults the world and demonstrates his opinions and politics are contaminated by capitalist racism, fascism, arrogance, and ignorance.

ā€œHistory has shown that those who offend like this end up eating their words.ā€

Bolivia’s President Evo Morales used his September 19 speech to the United Nations General Assembly to condemn terrorism, abusive market practices and wars in countries such as Syria, Iraq, Libya as well as the humanitarian crisis in Yemen.

In his address to the 72nd UN General AssemblyĀ in New York, Morales also sentĀ his solidarity to the people of MexicoĀ after the 7.1 earthquake and Caribbean nations devastated by hurricanes Irma and Maria.

BolivianĀ President Evo Morales has rejected the United StatesĀ economic blockade imposed on Cuba, as well as President Donald Trump’s decision to backtrack on the normalisation of diplomatic relations with Havana.

In a public letter sent to his Cuban counterpart Raul Castro, Morales repeated his nation’s ā€œunconditional support and solidarityā€ with the Cuban Revolution and the ā€œmost heroic people of the continentā€.

Bolivian President Evo Morales offered to ā€œfreeā€ Organization of American States, OAS, Secretary General Luis Almagro from the ā€œNorth American empireā€ on June 24

ā€œI offer to free brother Luis Almagro from submission to the North American empire,ā€ Morales said in a tweet. ā€œAll for the dignity and sovereignty of our peoples.ā€

The message came only hours after Almargo declared that he would resign ā€œfor freedom in Venezuela.ā€

At the closing of the on June 21 in Tiquipaya, Bolivia, social movements called for a ā€œworld without walls,ā€Ā while Bolivian President Evo Morales urged social movements to adopt the progressive proposals of the gathering's final declaration, which dubbed the migration crisis as just one symptom of neoliberal globalisation.Ā 

Below are five new books for the bookshelves of ecosocialists. They cover climate change, the Anthropocene, water and food — plusĀ an inspiring account of the Russian Revolution by award-winningĀ science fiction writer China Mieville.

The Bolivian government has proposed a bill that would allow workers to take over the private companies they work at if they go bankrupt, and convert them into ā€œsocial companiesā€ to stimulate production and address unemployment, Pagina Siete reported on May 16.

The government justified the measure as part of the state's duty to protect labour rights and generate job opportunities while improving the productive apparatus of the country.

Venezuelan Foreign Minister Delcy Rodriguez announced that the country will begin the process of exiting the Organization of American States (OAS).

The announcement came after the organisation's Permanent Council agreed on April 26 to convene a meeting of foreign ministers to discuss the situation in Venezuela, with 19 votes in favour, 10 against, one abstention and one absence.

ā€œWar aids capitalism, those who support capitalism support war, that is, the philosophy of death and destruction,ā€ Boliva’s left-wing President Evo Morales said on April 18.

Morales warned that humanity was ā€œat risk of disappearing in a nuclear holocaust,ā€ as tensions mount worldwide after US military attacks in Syria and Afghanistan.

ā€œNuclear power in the United States and Western countries are getting us dangerously closer to a nuclear conflagration.ā€

Bolivia’s government and social movements have announced they will host a global people’s summit on migrants and refugee rights. The "People’s Conference for a World without Walls and Universal Citizenship", set for June 20 and 21, is expected to draw together immigration experts and pro-migrant and refugee rights organisations and activists from around the world.

Ecuadorean said on January 30 that Latin America needed to respond with a strong, united front against the anti-immigration measures of US President Donald Trump, T.

Evo Morales

The world was again entering an era of ā€œdark capitalist and imperialist barbarismā€ which acts against human dignity, the integrity of Mother Earth and the sovereignty of countries, Bolivian President Evo Morales told the United Nations General Assembly on September 21.

Morales, Bolivia’s first indigenous president, called for a ā€œnew world orderā€ that, rather than building walls, built a global citizenry where all people live together as a common family.