Evo Morales, Bolivia's Under-Fire Indigenous President

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Evo Morales, Bolivia's first indigenous president, won affection for boosting the poor nation's fortunes, but scandal has hit as he tries to extend his term to nearly two decades.

A former llama herder, trumpeter and keen amateur footballer, the 56-year-old leftist leader has had an antagonistic relationship with the United States but has been widely loved at home.

A member of the Aymara indigenous group, Morales grew up in a home with no running water or electricity in Orinoca, a village hidden in the Andes.

As a child he tended llamas and kindled a lifelong passion for football. When he grew up he played the trumpet in a folk band before becoming a coca leaf farmer.

Having got his start in politics as a coca-growers' union leader, he defied centuries of discrimination against Bolivia's indigenous communities to win a landslide election victory and started his first term as president in 2006.

He has since presided over a period of strong economic growth and transformative changes for the long-suffering indigenous majority.

Bolivia's mineral- and gas-rich economy has more than tripled in size during his decade in office.

"When I was sworn in as president in 2006, some of our opponents said, 'Poor little Indian, let him have fun for a few months. He won't be able to govern and after that we'll get rid of him,'" he once said.

But with the opposition riven by infighting, Morales won resoundingly in three presidential elections: 54 percent of the vote in 2005, 64 percent in 2009 and 61 percent in 2014.

His politics blend the indigenous power movement with environmentalism and the "21st-century socialism" preached by other Latin American leftist leaders.

He has nationalized the oil, gas, mining and telecommunications sectors and rolled out welfare grants for the elderly, children and expecting mothers.

Despite plunging prices for its oil and gas, Bolivia's economy grew 4.8 percent last year, one of the strongest rates in Latin America.

- 'Married to Bolivia' -

Morales has defended coca growers from the U.S. "war on drugs" and cultivated ties with Cuba, Venezuela and Iran.

"The gringos don't govern here -- the Indians do," he said last week.

In 2008 he kicked the U.S. Drug Enforcement Agency out of the country, along with the U.S. ambassador, accusing them of conspiring against his government.

Opponents accuse Morales of presiding over corruption and investing in flashy infrastructure projects at the expense of health and education.

A new constitution adopted in 2009 imposed a limit of one reelection for sitting presidents, but Bolivia's Supreme Court ruled Morales' first term was exempt, letting him run in 2014.

His current term ends in 2020, but on Sunday Bolivians vote in a referendum that could amend the constitution and enable him to serve until 2025.

Morales, who is unmarried, recently admitted having a child with businesswoman Gabriela Zapata during a two-year relationship that began in 2005 when she was 18.

Zapata is now a manager at Chinese construction firm CAMC -- and charges of favoritism ran wild when the company recently landed major Bolivian state contracts.

Morales had previously been mostly discreet about his private life.

"I am married to Bolivia," he once said.