Bolivians rounded up during the first dictatorship of Hugo Banzer.
Bolivia Turns Old Torture Chambers into Museums
martes, 23 de agosto de 2011
23 de agosto de 2011, 15:31La Paz, Aug 23 (Prensa Latina)
Minister of Government of Bolivia, Sacha Llorenti, stressed on Tuesday the initiative to turn into museums old torture chambers of military dictatorships.
Llorenti said that this is one of the most heartfelt tributes to the victims of the actions of Hugo Banzer (1971-1978) and to the desire to rescue the historical memory.
Many people were harassed and humiliated in these torture chambers, which were discovered in the basement of the Ministry of Government, recalled Llorenti.
Ministers of Mining and Cultures, José Pimentel and Elizabeth Salguero, respectively, and human rights activists and the Association of Relatives of the Disappeared and Martyrs for National Liberation (Asofand) participated in the inauguration of the new exhibition.
The opening was also attended by former government minister Alfredo Rada, who had the initiative in setting up this museum to honor the martyrs who gave their lives for a Bolivia with dignity and sovereignty.
Emotional testimony was also offered by the current deputy interior minister, Marcos Farfán, one of the survivors of the tortures of military regimes.
mh/as/gpm-lac/Ga
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The Bush Doctrine in Latin America, edited by Gary Prevost and Carlos Oliva Campos, Palgrave Macmillan, 2007, 272 pp., $22.95 paperback
In a 1998 commencement speech at Texas A&M University, Jorge “Tuto” Quiroga, an alumnus of the school and then the vice president of Bolivia under the former dictator General Hugo Banzer, told the graduates, “I can tell you that
was the best U.S. president Bolivia has ever had.”
Tuto’s enthusiasm for Bush was no accident. In 1991, Bolivia became one of the first countries to accept the conditional aid and debt relief of George H.W. Bush’s Enterprise of the Americas Initiative (EAI), a set of policies designed to encourage trade, private investment and structural adjustment in Latin America.
The EAI’s conditionality, which included massive privatizations, consolidated the neoliberal reforms in Bolivia that were first promoted in the early1980s by Northern economists like Jeffrey Sachs and implemented in 1985 by the government’s planning minister, Gonzalo “Goni” Sánchez de Lozada.
The history is now familiar—the privatizations that led to the Water War in Cochabamba were negotiated and announced almost exactly one year after Tuto’s speech in Texas—and the consequences of these policies are now clear. The “best U.S. President Bolivia ever had” was instrumental in promoting and consolidating the policies that led to the massive mobilizations that have changed the course of Bolivian, and perhaps Latin American, history.
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(The Cochabamba Water War -- Bechtel raised water rates threefold, and imposed a tax on RAINWATER. Protests (with heavy loss of life) drove the company out, as well as then President Sanchez de Lozada, who is now living comfortably in Maryland, just outside Washington. Bolivia has asked for his extradition for the massacre, but Clinton, dubya and now Obama have ignored it.)