Citizen G'kar: Musings on Earth

June 09, 2005

Big Trouble in Bolivia

Bolivia has had a popular insurrection since Che Guevara stalked the mountains there in the 1960's. In that context, I did a bit of investigating about the recent history of Bolivia and found a common denominator. Oil and Natural Gas.
Senator Prepares to Take Over in Bolivia Despite Opposition
Outgoing President Carlos Mesa and other leaders warned of an impending "civil war" as a conservative senator prepared Wednesday to assume power in this conflict-ravaged country.


Hormando Vaca Diez, who could be sworn in as early as today, told reporters a "blood bath" could result if protest groups opposed his presidency. Vaca Diez, as president of the Senate, is next in line to succeed Mesa, who offered his resignation Monday.


Groups representing Indians, agricultural workers and unions that have laid siege to La Paz and other Bolivian cities said Wednesday that they would vehemently oppose Vaca Diez's succession because he represented the nation's "eastern oligarchy."


Looking through the material I found here and here. There appears to be a lot of articles about the US meddling in Bolivia to corner a profitable oil/gas market. Meanwhile, the people, the poorest in South America, have demanded a 50% share of the oil/gas profits, apparently in payments not unlike Native American casinos have paid out. Indeed, why should a few fat cats get all the profit in a dirt poor country?
AxisofLogic
The deal was approved by Congress. However, but when it went to the Senate for ratification, President Mesa made recommendations to the Senate which included the possibility of loophole-recovery of these fees by U.S.-based multinational corporations. The Senate amended the law to include new language proposed by Mesa, ratified it, and sent it back to President Mesa to sign it into law. But then president Mesa, obviously fearful of the repercussions, would not give final approval to the law and turned it over to Congress! May 18, President of the Congress, Hormando Vaca Díez stated, “I have no other option but to sign this law in light of the refusal of President Mesa”.

But the "eastern oligarchy" referred to in the LA Times article is a rich man's secessionist movement in the region around Santa Cruz, not coincidentally the area that has the oil. These fat cats, it appears, are backed by the US government. If a new President can't put down the popular insurrection, Santa Cruz will secede apparently with US support with the sole intent of selling oil to the oil companies. How better for Bush to compensate for the loss of Venezuela oil?
Today, legislators had to be flown to Sucre in military airplanes for to ensure Diez could be elected president without disruption. Will civil war break out? It seems inevitable. Poor residents of Santa Cruz have barricaded the gasoline facility to blockade gas from reaching La Paz until the oil companies are nationalized. The capital city is surrounded by the "social movements" supporters.
DallasNews.com | News for Dallas, Texas | World
At the root of Bolivia's unrest is a deep sense among the impoverished Indian majority of a lack of political representation and an unjust distribution of resources. The Indians want:


Social benefits for the poor, including more job opportunities, better wages and improved access to health care and education in rural areas. A constitutional assembly in which delegates from all sectors of society gather to craft a new constitution that would grant more power to Quechua and Aymara Indians and adopt a new economic model that gives more control to the state. Nationalization of Bolivia's oil industry, which protesters say would redistribute wealth. Privatization and plans to export gas have sparked fears that only wealthy Bolivians and corporations would benefit.


Many members of Bolivia's middle and upper classes feel disjointed from a population that paralyzes the country when they have a grievance. They want:


An end to the protests that they say halt business and development. Political autonomy from the rest of the country in the relatively prosperous regions of Santa Cruz and Tarija, where the majority of natural resources are located and the free-market economic model is embraced.


SOURCE: Associated Press

Before you assume that the "many middle and upper classes" referred to in the above quote makes it sound like an honest disagreement between large parts of the population, remember that middle class in a poor country is relatively small. So the many, is a minority of the overall population. Things are likely to get ugly very fast.


Complete Article
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------
http://www.latimes.com/news/nationworld/world/la-fg-bolivia9jun09.story
THE WORLD
Senator Prepares to Take Over in Bolivia Despite Opposition
President Mesa urges his likely successor not to take the post, saying he could spark 'civil war.'
By Héctor Tobar
Times Staff Writer
June 9, 2005
LA PAZ, Bolivia — Outgoing President Carlos Mesa and other leaders warned of an impending "civil war" as a conservative senator prepared Wednesday to assume power in this conflict-ravaged country.
Hormando Vaca Diez, who could be sworn in as early as today, told reporters a "blood bath" could result if protest groups opposed his presidency. Vaca Diez, as president of the Senate, is next in line to succeed Mesa, who offered his resignation Monday.
Groups representing Indians, agricultural workers and unions that have laid siege to La Paz and other Bolivian cities said Wednesday that they would vehemently oppose Vaca Diez's succession because he represented the nation's "eastern oligarchy."
Vaca Diez is from the relatively affluent province of Santa Cruz, which is seeking greater autonomy. Eastern leaders have grown weary of the protests led mostly by Aymara and Quechua Indians in western Bolivia.
The social upheaval has spread across the country. Local media reported that poor farmers demanding nationalization of the country's oil reserves had seized at least seven oil wells in remote areas of Santa Cruz province. In Potosi province, indigenous leaders announced that they would seize property owned by large landholders.
At a news conference at his home in the city of Santa Cruz late Tuesday, Vaca Diez said that the time had come to end "the vacuum of power" in Bolivia and restore order after months of upheaval.
"If one faction from the many social sectors chooses to set aside these principles [of national unity] and pushes toward confrontation and a blood bath, it will end in authoritarian government," Vaca Diez said. Congress is scheduled to meet today in Sucre, the constitutional capital, to accept Mesa's resignation. The legislature is also expected to ratify a new president.
Vaca Diez moved the congressional session from La Paz, the seat of Bolivia's federal government, saying the legislature lacked the security "guarantees" necessary to meet there.
In a televised address late Tuesday, Mesa urged Vaca Diez not to seek the presidency, saying he could provoke a "civil war."
"Hormando, as a person, as a politician, as someone who has known you for a long time, I make a personal plea to you," he said. "Don't insist on going down a road that's impossible to follow."
Mesa, the vice president who came to power in 2003, decided to step down in the face of the tens of thousands of protesters who have laid siege to La Paz and other Bolivian cities.
Vaca Diez said he was confident the police and the army could restore order and would remain loyal to a new government in a country divided along ethnic and regional lines.
"I am absolutely convinced that the armed forces will back us and will help guarantee that democracy does not die in Bolivia," he said.
In La Paz, Indian and workers leaders said they would engage in acts of "civic resistance" against police and army troops should the government attempt to clear the streets.
The leftist and Indian groups want to convene a Constituent Assembly to rewrite Bolivia's constitution to give more power to its indigenous and impoverished majority.
Evo Morales, leader of the Movement to Socialism and an Aymara Indian, called Vaca Diez "a member of the political mafia."
"We absolutely cannot accept Vaca Diez as president," Morales said. "He is the head of a system of corrupt and obsolete political parties which are destined to disappear."
Miners and activists from Chuquisaca, Potosi, Oruro and other regions said Wednesday that they would march on Sucre in a bid to thwart Vaca Diez.
Morales finished second in the last presidential election in 2002 to Gonzalo Sanchez de Lozada, who was ousted from power by an Indian-led protest movement in October 2003.
Morales is considered among the favorites to win a presidential election. He and other leaders of centrist and leftist parties have called on Congress to appoint the head of the Supreme Court as a caretaker president until an election can be held.
And Wednesday, police in La Paz said they were preparing to guard government buildings in the capital city.
Two air carriers, LAN Chile and American Airlines, canceled flights to La Paz on Wednesday. The airport is in the El Alto suburb, an Indian stronghold.
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------
If you want other stories on this topic, search the Archives at latimes.com/archives.
Article licensing and reprint options
Copyright 2005 Los Angeles Times

No comments: