Submitted by Vanessa Baird on June 24, 2008 - 4:53pm.
Bolivia divided
It comes as no surprise that the southern province
of Tarija voted for autonomy from Bolivia
last weekend.
The province – which contains much of the country’s oil and
gas wealth – was joining three others, Santa Cruz,
Beni and Pando, in seeking independence from central
government.
But the naked racism, hatred and violence with which
right-wingers, opposed to indigenous president
Evo Morales, are pursing their autonomy campaign is shocking even to hardened
locals.
Recently, in the city of Sucre,
50 indigenous community leaders were violently attacked by right-wing activists,
forced to strip and parade naked around the central square and watch their
traditional clothing being burned.
‘Kill the Indian, they said, and all of this occurred in the
presence of the President of the Municipal Council of Sucre, Fidel Herrera, and
the Mayor Aidée Nava; they applauded everything these violent groups did,’
reported the Mayor of Mojocoya, Ángel Vallejos, who was punched and forced to
walk on his knees.
A reporter for Radio ALCO – working in partnership with the British aid agency
CAFOD to give indigenous people a voice – was beaten and drenched with alcohol
and left fearing for her life.
When I was in Santa Cruz
a few months ago several of the people I met described the, mainly white and mestizo, autonomy-seekers as ‘racists’ (see
NI 410
– I will return) Subsequent events have proved that the word was not
being used lightly. Humiliation seems to
be a key part of the opposition’s psychological arsenal against indigenous
peoples who have been enjoying something of a cultural revolution since Evo
Morales’ electoral victory in late 2005.
Autonomy is red hot issue for more than cultural reasons,
though. Bolivia
depends on gas and oil wealth which brings in 1.2 billion dollars a year in
taxes and revenues. The Government’s raft of new social welfare reforms such as
free health care for the young and the old, grants for children in education,
universal old aged pension, and specific programmes for indigenous development,
are all paid for out gas and oil revenues. The traditionally ruling elites in the
would-be autonomous provinces want to have greater control over such revenues
to use as they see fit. These elites are also fiercely – at times violently –
resisting an ambitious land reform programme that will take away some land from
families with massive estates.
So what is in store now for Morales and the Movement Toward
Socialism party he heads? On 10 August there will be a recall referendum for
the President, Vice-President and eight of the country’s
nine Governors. If successful in the ballot, Morales says he wants to
hold a public referendum on a draft constitution which has been awaiting
approval since last year. The Constitution would, among other things, enshrine land
redistribution to Bolivia’s
indigenous majority and a sharing of wealth with the poorer western regions. MAS, which still has strong support in the West of the country,
including La Paz, and from the social movements that brought it to power, is
saying it expects a repetition of the 53 per cent victory it polled in 2005. But
with food shortages, strikes and rising inflation to add to their woes, it
looks like tough times ahead.
For more see
http://upsidedownworld.org/main/content/view/1347/68/
http://www.boliviainfoforum.org.uk/
http://www.newint.org/features/2008/04/01/power-struggle/
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Vanessa Baird is an NI co-editor.
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