Originally posted by KrazyHorse
You can apologise at your leisure.
You can apologise at your leisure.
The shares were put in trust upon privatisation of the oil and gas industry. A trust is not Morales private pond.
The rest of Colon's link.
The move would immediately give the government control over a large, but minority block of shares in three energy companies. The shares are worth an estimated $1.5 billion, according to Andres Soliz, Bolivia's hydrocarbons minister.
Vice President Alvaro Garcia Linera said attempts to negotiate with the financial institutions had been unsuccessful and the government was forced to issue a decree demanding the shares.
"Nobody is going to stop the nationalization, no external force, and much less any conservative internal force that has tried to block this," Garcia Linera said after signing the decree.
Garcia Linera was apparently referring to a company official who said last week that the law would not allow the government to take the shares without paying compensation.
The three local energy companies involved are Andina SA, a subsidiary of the Spanish-Argentine Repsol YPF; Chaco SA, a unit of Britain's BG Group PLC and BP PLC, and Transredes SA, of British-Dutch owned Shell Corp.
All three were once Bolivian state-run companies that were privatized in the 1990s. Foreign shareholders took majority control, while a little less than half the shares of each were put in a trust for the Bolivian people. The trust is used to pay a pension to all Bolivians over 65.
The government insists it will continue to pay the pension, but said it will also use the funds to boost its cash-strapped state energy company.
On May 1, President Evo Morales ordered the takeover of his country's 53 foreign-owned natural gas installations, sending white-helmeted military police with semiautomatic rifles to guard the continent's second-largest gas reserves.
He gave the companies six months to negotiate new contracts or leave.
Speaking Monday to the European Parliament, Morales said that foreign companies could profit from their investments in the country — but that the state would control the oil and gas resources.
Vice President Alvaro Garcia Linera said attempts to negotiate with the financial institutions had been unsuccessful and the government was forced to issue a decree demanding the shares.
"Nobody is going to stop the nationalization, no external force, and much less any conservative internal force that has tried to block this," Garcia Linera said after signing the decree.
Garcia Linera was apparently referring to a company official who said last week that the law would not allow the government to take the shares without paying compensation.
The three local energy companies involved are Andina SA, a subsidiary of the Spanish-Argentine Repsol YPF; Chaco SA, a unit of Britain's BG Group PLC and BP PLC, and Transredes SA, of British-Dutch owned Shell Corp.
All three were once Bolivian state-run companies that were privatized in the 1990s. Foreign shareholders took majority control, while a little less than half the shares of each were put in a trust for the Bolivian people. The trust is used to pay a pension to all Bolivians over 65.
The government insists it will continue to pay the pension, but said it will also use the funds to boost its cash-strapped state energy company.
On May 1, President Evo Morales ordered the takeover of his country's 53 foreign-owned natural gas installations, sending white-helmeted military police with semiautomatic rifles to guard the continent's second-largest gas reserves.
He gave the companies six months to negotiate new contracts or leave.
Speaking Monday to the European Parliament, Morales said that foreign companies could profit from their investments in the country — but that the state would control the oil and gas resources.
Profit?!
And it points out that the gov't isn't taking guardianship of the shares, they are taking the shares. They 'promise' to pay the pensions.
How much does that mean when the economy goes down the crapper?
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