In Bolivia, Water and Ice Tell of Climate Change
New York Times - Mon Dec 14, 12:12 am ETAddressing problems like Bolivia’s, where the retreat of glaciers threatens water supplies, is a key focus of talks in Copenhagen.
303 Stories, most recent news story added Sun Dec 6, 6:13 pm ET
Addressing problems like Bolivia’s, where the retreat of glaciers threatens water supplies, is a key focus of talks in Copenhagen.
In the US, presidential elections shift trillions of dollars and move armies across the globe. In Bolivia, the stakes are even higher. Hoy, el 6...
Dec. 6 (Bloomberg) -- Bolivian President Evo Morales is leading in his bid to become the country’s first president to win consecutive re-election in more than four decades, exit polls showed.
Leftist Bolivian President Evo Morales easily won re-election on Sunday, three television exit polls showed.
President Evo Morales was highly favored to win re-election on Sunday in balloting expected to further spur revolutionary change on behalf of Bolivia's long-suppressed indigenous majority.
Dec. 6 (Bloomberg) -- Bolivian President Evo Morales will likely win re-election today on pledges to expand his socialist “revolution” by increasing state control over the South American country’s energy and mining industries.
La Paz - Polls closed Sunday without major incidents in Bolivian elections for a new president and National Congress. Four years after taking office, President Evo Morales - Bolivia's first indigenous head of state - was poised for re-election with a...
President Evo Morales, whose leftist economic policies have made him broadly popular with Bolivia's poor but angered business leaders, is expected to win re-election on Sunday, allowing him to expand state control over the economy.
Bolivian President Evo Morales, a fervent anti-US leader, looked poised to easily win re-election on Sunday thanks to overwhelming support from his country's indigenous majority.
Incumbent Evo Morales was favored by a wide margin in Sunday's presidential election in Bolivia, polls indicated. Morales, 50, had strong support from the indigenous majority, which comprises more than 60 percent of Bolivia's population, The New York Times reported.
La Paz - Bolivians began voting on Sunday in elections for a a new president and parliament. Four years after taking office, President Evo Morales - Bolivia's first indigenous head of state - was poised for re-election with a first-round majority. ...
Polls opened Sunday in Bolivia's general election that is likely to deliver Evo Morales another five-year term in office and consolidate the anti-American president's hold on power.
LA PAZ, Bolivia -- The slogans and posters of Che Guevara notwithstanding, this is not Havana circa 1969, nor Managua, 1979. Instead, the fervor in the offices of the Deputy Ministry of Decolonization could only be felt in the Bolivia of President Evo Morales, who seems to be sailing toward a victory in an election on Sunday.
Bolivian President Evo Morales, whose leftist economic policies have made him broadly popular with the poor but angered business leaders, is expected to win re-election on Sunday, allowing him to expand state control over the economy.
About five million Bolivians go to the polls Sunday in an election that is likely to deliver Evo Morales another five-year term in office and consolidate the anti-American president's hold on power.
Buenos Aires/La Paz - Four years after taking office, Evo Morales, Bolivia's first president of indigenous descent, is poised for re-election with a first-round majority. A year ago, Bolivia seemed haunted by the ghosts of civil war, with deep divisi...