La Paz: Bolivia's interim President Jeanine Anez has taken charge and appointed a new military high command and the government even as erstwhile head of state Evo Morales proclaimed from Mexico that he was ready to return to the Andean nation if the people ask it.
In her first speech to the nation, Anez on Wednesday called for a peaceful and democratic transition and rejected Morales' characterization of this week's events in Bolivia as a coup.
"I want to make it clear that there is no coup d'etat in Bolivia, there is a repositioning of constitutional legality," she said vowing to organize new elections as soon as possible.
"It is fundamental that everybody realizes that today begins a peaceful and democratic route to restore legality and that I have given the armed forces and the National Police responsibility for guaranteeing the pacification of the country," she cited.
"I speak of a change of regime, of reversing the conditions that turned us into a totalitarian country, to build fully democratic values, institutions and procedures," she said.
"I assure you that persecutions and intimidation have ended," she added.
Morales, Bolivia's first indigenous president announced on Sunday that he was stepping down after the military brass publicly called on him to resign amid a crisis stemming from accusations by the opposition that his October 20 election victory was tainted by fraud.
Violence associated with protests that followed the elections has so far left eight people dead, 508 injured and 460 under arrest, according to official figures while bringing economic activity to a halt.