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On the front page of the press this morning, the situation in Bolivia, two days after the resignation of Socialist President Evo Morales.

According to the Bolivian newspaper El Deber , the deposed ruler is on his way to Mexico, which has offered him political asylum - a temporary exile, according to Evo Morales, who promised to return to Bolivia "with greater force. and energy ". The resigning president leaves behind a country "plunged into chaos by the vacancy of power," according to El Pais . The Spanish daily reports that US President Donald Trump has welcomed the forced resignation of Evo Morales as "a strong signal" for what he considers to be "illegitimate regimes" in Latin America.

Evo Morales, he says to have been a victim of a "coup". This speech is relayed by the European leftist press, including Il Manifesto , Italy, which explains that Evo Morales, abandoned by both the army and the unions, agreed to resign "to avoid civil war." "An old-fashioned coup has brought down the first indigenous government in the history of Bolivia, but hatred and violence will not stop," warns the newspaper. In France, the communist daily L'Humanité believes that Evo Morales was the "target of a disguised coup", and that "it is not the civic protest against the result of the elections that (the) initially pushed but the combined action of militia violence masked the right-wing shift of the police and the army and pressure from the United States and conservative governments speaking under the guise of the Organization of American States ".

Many reactions, too, from the side of cartoonists. According to Brazilian cartoonist Carlos Latuff, forcing Evo Morales to resign, the Bolivian military trample on the Constitution of their country, with the complicity of the Brazilian neighbor and the United States, whose arm is the CIA. The United States, as the American cartoonist Mike Flugennock shows snatching Bolivia to South America, to make a new star of their national flag. Two drawings found on Twitter .

Also on the front page this morning is the expulsion by Turkey of several members of the Islamic State group. Türkiye reports that a 28-year-old Danish national was sent back to his country yesterday, where he was arrested when he arrived in Copenhagen and the expulsion of two other "terrorists", an American and a German. According to Daily Sabah, Turkey, which holds more than 1,200 members of the Islamic State group, will also expel in the coming days 22 other foreign jihadists, including 11 French and 7 Germans. Regarding the 11 French jihadists La Croix specifies that the majority of them are women, whose children will be placed upon their arrival in France. Adults, whose identities have not been revealed, will be immediately placed in custody and interrogated by the intelligence services, for possible detention.

France is today hosting the Paris Forum for Peace - a summit to promote multilateralism. According to Liberation , this meeting could be an opportunity for Emmanuel Macron to revisit his resounding statements last week on the global weakening of multilateralism. According to the French president, he does not spare NATO, which he described as in a state of "brain death". Highly commented and criticized by the European partners, especially by the German Angela Merkel, who said that "such an inopportune judgment" was "not necessary".

Liberation returns to the one on the emergence, a year ago, the movement of yellow vests. A year later, the newspaper wonders about the political future of the movement, especially in municipal next year. Will yellow vests be able to pass "from the street to the polls?" Libé believes that "what is certain is that (the) movement (will) marked a real break in the mandate of Emmanuel Macron (and) allowed to return to politics many people who had moved away "- a" brand new craze (which) will inevitably irrigate, in one way or another, the future deadlines ". One year later, yellow vests remember the atmosphere of the first days. "Contempt has federated us," says in 20 minutes , Claude, retired and "yellow vest" of the first hour. Francky describes what the movement taught him. "In France, we are not here to live, we are here to pay. Everyone stays at home in front of the TV, blocked by credits. At least now, I know I'm no longer alone, there is solidarity. "

A word, before we leave, these dozens of packages of cocaine that have been stranded on the French beaches for a week. 800 kilos of extremely pure cocaine packed in dozens of black plastic bags have been found on the Atlantic coast since last week - drug packages whose origins are still unknown, arrived there, we do not know how. According to Le Parisien , this "white tide" may not be over yet, and gives rise to a strange treasure hunt, a whole bunch of apprentice fishermen finding themselves on the shores, attracted by the bait of the gain, or simply by cocaine. "Everyone is looking for coke, it's everywhere," says a witness. Surrealist…

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