a fiery Aymara Indian... "to live with dignity and fight against (free-market) neo-liberal policies"... I'm liking him already! Googling him now...
"He who owes nothing, fears nothing"
-- Evo Morales, on Hunger Strike
Evo Morales and opposition to the US in Bolivia By Erin Ralston
La Paz, Bolivia. The poorest country in South America may be sending the U.S. an eviction notice.
On June 30, 2002 an historic election was held in which a radical leftist indigenous government won substantial power. Running on a strong anti-neoliberal campaign Evo Morales ("Evo") and his MAS(Movement Toward Socialism) party struck a direct blow to the U.S. and transnational monetary organizations.
Mocked in the American press as a "coca chewing Amymara Indian leader who would nationalize Bolivia's industries, stop payment of its foreign debt and halt American backed efforts to end coca growing." (New York Times July 6, 2002), Evo has the last laugh.
Evo Morales is well known for his leadership of groups of coca unions and their fight against U.S. backed eradication policies, which many believe have only caused further poverty. Earlier this year, after three police officers were killed in a confrontation at the attempted closure of a coca market, Evo's connection with rebellious coca farm workers led to his expulsion from the congress. No evidence was provided supporting his involvement: The U.S. is widely believed to be behind his expulsion.
Unfortunately for the U.S., Evo´s expulsion only helped his case. Running on an a anti-neoliberal, anti-big business, and anti-coca eradication campaign, Evo stood out as the candidate not willing to take orders from the U.S. Embassy. And the U.S. Embassy was forced to respond. The Wednesday before the election U.S. ambassador Manuel Rocha declared, ''As a representative of the United States, I want to remind the Bolivian electorate that if you elect those who want Bolivia to become a major cocaine exporter again, this will endanger the future of U.S. assistance to Bolivia,'
(snip)
Despite the final outcome of the elections Morales assures MAS will be a major force,
"For the first time in 17 years neoliberalism is going to have an active opposition. We are going to set out legislation for Bolivia and not for the transnationals." The high school drop out "coca chewing Amymara indian" promises he will be able to negotiate with the WB and IMF and, "would only cut off relations with the U.S. if they fail to recognize Bolivian sovereignty."
http://www.zmag.org/sustainers/content/2002-07/14ralston.cfm===
BOLIVIA: Who is Evo Morales?
BY ALEJANDRO RODRIGUEZ
In April 2000, Aguas de Tanari, a large multinational corporation, was due to take over the
privatised water works in Cochabamba. Water prices were to increase and
laws were passed to make it illegal to catch and use rain water. Water would be out of the reach of the majority of residents, 65% of whom live below the poverty line. Mass demonstrations erupted, roads were blocked and running battles where fought with the police and the army until the government gave in. The sell-off was defeated.
(snip)
Long before coca was used to make cocaine, the indigenous people of the Andean region, the Aymara and Quechua, chewed coca leaves as a dietary supplement. The consumption of coca leaves and tea is part of daily life for Bolivia's peasants, miners and workers. The US-led “Plan Dignidad” (dignity plan), which seeks to reduce coca production to zero, is seen by them as an attack on the peasant's livelihoods and the indigenous people's way of life.
This US-financed plan involves
US military advisers on the ground ordering Bolivian soldiers to attack, kill and displace peasants with US-made weapons. This has led to resistance among the peasants, with several self-defence groups being formed. In 2001, for the first time since coca eradication began, more police and soldiers were killed than peasants.
Morales has publicly declared that he not only supports the peasants' right to self-defence but is participating in the organisation of these popular self-defence groups with the aim of forming a people's army.
Since early 2001, Morales and the MAS have campaigned across Bolivia for the June 30 presidential election. The MAS platform included: the
nationalisation of strategic industries; price reductions and a price freeze on household goods; the provision of basic services for all; defence of free public health and education; increased taxes for the rich; an end to corruption; the redistribution of land to those that work it; a new political apparatus; an end to neo-liberal economic policies; and opposition to a “flexible” work force. (snip)
http://www.greenleft.org.au/back/2002/501/501p16b.htm=====
Oh boy! Pretty soon we may be hearing that Al-Qaeda is in Bolivia!
...
Spoke too soon... It's dead certain now. They're planning to nationalize their Gas... Saddaam's big crime in '78
===
Bolivian Bill to Nationalize Gas Feared by Foreign InterestsBolivian Bill to Nationalize Gas Feared by Foreign Interests
By Benjamin Melancon,
Posted on Wed Dec 22nd, 2004 at 12:47:17 PM EST
The subhead of the December 20 Miami Herald article
"Bolivia approves natural gas law" is enough to know that the proposed law is a victory, of sorts, for the social movements: "Law may stop investment in the sector, cause massive lawsuits."
In November, Herald reporter Tyler Bridges wrote, the House gave preliminary approval to a Movement Toward Socialism measure to have the state unilaterally seize control of the natural gas reserves and impose an immediate and much higher tax than President Carlos Mesa proposed.
As Alex Contreras Baspineiro reported for
Narco News on July 19, new hydrocarbons legislation was inevitable after more than ninety percent of participants in Mesa's referendum voted for the government to reclaim all hydrocarbons "at the mouth of the well."
As hoped by many of those voting and also those abstaining, Mesa lost control of his referendum proposal. The often vague language, instead of being used by Mesa to nationalize in name but not in fact, is being interpreted by the Bolivian Congress in accordance with the population's wishes. One of Mesa's questions approved by voters called for nationalizing the gas reserves.
Bridges wrote:
Mesa said it really meant giving the state greater control over the reserves while keeping them under foreign control.
But with polls showing that most voters thought it did actually mean nationalization, Movement Toward Socialism and the more moderate and conservative political parties used that to rewrite Mesa's proposal.
The president and his top aides hope that the moderates and conservatives will have a change of heart and produce a bill acceptable to the foreign community.
(Wow! Talka about selling your people down the river!))
(snip)
Foreign Elite OppositionWealthy foreign companies, who will have to pay much more for Bolivia's gas and lose control over its development, oppose the bill. Already they are putting pressure on Bolivia through their agents and the institutions of neo-colonialism, customarily known as "the international community" in establishment press reports such as Bridges':
Foreign companies and their allies in the international community have said the law would amount to the forced nationalization of the reserves.
This would prompt lawsuits by the foreign companies and would likely prompt a reduction in aid by the United States, the World Bank, the International Monetary Fund and the Inter-American Development Bank, sources in the international community said.
The Brazilian government has also pointedly warned leaders of Congress against passing the bill since the Brazilian petroleum company, Petrobras, is the largest investor in Bolivia.
(snip)
http://narcosphere.narconews.com/story/2004/12/22/124717/47==
Bolivians Demand Recovery of Gas From Foreign CorporationsWith the Referendum Over, the Battle Moves to Congress and to the Streets
By Alex Contreras Baspineiro
Narco News South American Bureau Chief
July 19, 2004
COCHABAMBA, BOLIVIA:
More than ninety percent of the people who actively participated in Bolivia’s binding referendum yesterday voted for the current government of Carlos Mesa to reclaim all hydrocarbons “at the mouth of the well” as property of the Bolivian State.
The phrase “mouth of the well” refers to the places where natural gas, petroleum, and other hydrocarbons extracted here are measured. Under ex-President Gonzalo Sánchez de Lozada’s Hydrocarbons Law 1689, these places were under the control of transnational corporations; now they must pass into State hands.
Despite threats from small radical groups of a boycott, roadblocks, and destruction of polling centers and ballots on the day of the referendum, these groups lacked the support of the people in both rural and urban areas.
(snip)
The “Yes” Vote Wins
The first question – “Do you agree with the repeal of Hydrocarbons Law 1689 passed by Gonzalo Sánchez de Lozada” – received 86.6 percent support, with 13.4 voting against.
The second question – “Do you agree with the recovery of all hydrocarbon property from ’the mouth of the well’ for the Bolivian State?” – won the most support, with 92.1 percent voting “yes” and only 7.9 percent voting “no.”
The third question – “Do agree with re-founding Yacimientos Petrolíferos Fiscales Bolivianos (state oil company), recovering state property held in Bolivians’ stocks in the privatized oil companies, in a way that will allow it to participate in the entire process of producing hydrocarbons?” – received 87.1 percent support, with 12.9 percent voting against.
(snip)
http://www.narconews.com/Issue33/article1006.html===
Oh boy... And not just Al-Qaeda but Al-Qaeda training centers I'm sure!
What's wrong with these people? Have they no work-houses? Have they no "centrist" coalitions doing cost analyses for them and touting the wonders of tricke-down economics ? ;) Woohoo! Go Bolivia!