Protests and blockades paralyzing La Paz. Roads across the country shut down. Campesinos marching on Santa Cruz attacked by stick-wielding youths. Congress struggling to find some compromise that can bring the country back to normal. All sides losing patience and repeated rumors of coups in the air. This is the way Bolivia looks tonight.
How would people in the U.S. feel if the IMF came in today and forced the US government to privatize Social Security, took that fundamental democratic choice right out of the public’s hands? Or suppose that the IMF forced the US government to turn over the Alaskan wilderness over to oil companies from China? What then?
What is happening in the streets of El Alto, La Paz and Cochabamba this week is nothing to be shocked about. It is a political boomerang a decade in the making from a simple fact – Bolivia did not hand control of its oil and gas reserves over to foreign companies because the people deliberated on it and decided it was a good deal. Bolivia took that action under the threat of losing foreign aid it was dependent upon.
You don’t take a decision like that away from people and then express shock and dismay when they finally react. If fatal violence again breaks out in Bolivia in the next week, let us not pretend that it was a purely Bolivian act. The actions that set that violence in motion will be traceable, once again, to an unelected institution a hemisphere away in Washington DC.
http://www.democracyctr.org/blog/index.htm