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Bolivia appointed its first ambassador to the United States in 11 years on Tuesday, officials said, as the interim government resets the countrys foreign policy after the departure of Evo Morales.

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Walter Oscar Serrate Cuellar has been given the key posting, the foreign ministry announced on Twitter, filling a position left vacant since a diplomatic spat between La Paz and Washington in 2008.

The high-profile appointment, which has to be approved by the Senate, comes as the caretaker government prepares to hold new elections that exclude Morales.

Morales Movement for Socialism party controls the upper house of Congress.

Serrate previously served as Bolivias ambassador and permanent representative at the United Nations, the ministry said.

Under Morales, Bolivias president for nearly 14 years, ties with the United States were tense.

Relations took a turn for the worse under former US leader George W. Bush, with the expulsion of ambassadors from both countries in late 2008.

Morales resigned on November 10 and fled to Mexico where he was granted political asylum after disputed October 20 elections ignited street protests.

Morales, who had been seeking a fourth term, claimed victory, but opposition groups said the results were rigged.

Since declaring herself interim president, right-wing senator Jeanine Anez, who has been recognized by the United States, has wasted no time rewriting Bolivias foreign policy.

She broke ties with socialist Cuba and Nicolas Maduros Venezuela.

Anezs first foreign policy decision was to recognize Venezuelas opposition leader Juan Guaido as the countrys president, joining a group of around 50 countries.

Foreign Minister Karen Longaric announced Venezuelan diplomats would be sent home for “violating diplomatic norms.”

Bolivia also fired all its ambassadors except those to Peru and the Vatican.

Easing tensions

Tuesdays announcement comes as some 20 former members of Morales government are holed up in Mexicos embassy in La Paz, the foreign ministry said.

Five of them—including Morales former top minister Juan Ramon Quintana—are wanted for arrest.

Both Morales and Quintana have been accused of sedition and terrorism.

Federal prosecutors are investigating allegations that Morales, after arriving in Mexico, enRead More – Source