A Bolivian fundraising telethon has collected 1.4
million U.S. dollars for quake-hit Chile and Haiti and the organizers
have decided to extend the campaign to raise more money, Bolivian
Minister of the Presidency Oscar Coca said on Sunday.
The
campaign "Chile and Haiti Need You" began on Tuesday and it was
originally set to end on Saturday. Coca said the donations stood at
about 1.4 million dollars as of Saturday.
Warm
response by the public prompted the authorities to extend the
fundraising for one more week, and continue to accept donations till
next Saturday, said Coca.
The
donations came from all parts of the country, including senior
government officials headed by President Evo Morales and Vice President
Alvaro Garcia.
A few days ago both Morales and Garcia announced the decision to donate half of their one-month salaries for the campaign.
During
his visit to Julio Borelli coliseum, the headquarters of the telethon,
Morales urged the Bolivian people to show solidarity with the countries
affected by the earthquakes.
The
campaign also collected money with cellphone text messages to the
state-run Empresa Nacional de Telecomunicaciones, or National Company
of Telecommunications.
Coca
said they received phone calls from different regions of the country
requesting the campaign to be extended in order to collect more money.
"We estimate that we will reach at least 1.5 million dollars, an amount that surpass our first goal," Coca said.
Over
the past week, Bolivia has also sent 120 tons of bottled water to Chile
to aid the victims of the 8.8-magnitude earthquake that shook the South
American country on Feb. 27.
In
January, Garcia took aid to Haiti, including 50 tons of rice, blood and
plasma, to aid the victims of a 7.3-magnitude earthquake that shook the
Caribbean country on Jan. 12.
Bolivia Rising