Bolivia on Saturday nationalised electrical utilities owned by Spanish company Iberdrola, sending in police and troops to enforce another expropriation ordered by the populist leader of South America's poorest nation. President Evo Morales announced a decree targeting Iberdrola-owned utilities in the cities of La Paz and Oruro. They are called Electropaz and Elfeo, respectively.
In La Paz, soldiers later took control of power plants that until now were run by Iberdrola, while police seized corporate offices. It was the latest in a series of such seizures by the outspoken leftist who is a key member of a group of populist South American presidents led by the now-ailing Hugo Chavez of Venezuela Back in May, Morales nationalised a subsidiary of another Spanish power group, Red Electrica Corporacion, which distributed electricity.
Since coming to power in January 2006 Bolivia's first president representing the country's indigenous majority has nationalised the country's oil wealth and smelters, in addition to electric power companies. This time, Morales said he was acting because Iberdrola charged more for electricity in rural areas than it did in cities, and service was also uneven.
"We are forced to take this measure so that utility rates will be uniform" and service will be of the same quality in the country as in urban areas, the president said at a ceremony at the presidential palace. He said Iberdrola would be compensated after an evaluation of its seized assets. This will be done by a private Bolivian company and can take up to six months. Morales' actions over the years have caused friction with Spain. Spain said after the Red Electrica nationalisation that it had been given assurances from Bolivia that there would be no more such expropriations.
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