[NYTr] Bolivia: Indigenous and Mestizo Power Flexes Muscles

nytr at olm.blythe-systems.com nytr at olm.blythe-systems.com
Thu Jul 26 11:09:17 EDT 2007


InterPress Service - Jul 25, 2007
http://www.ipsnews.net/news.asp?idnews=38669

Bolivia: Indigenous and Mestizo Power Flexes Muscles

by Franz Chavez

La Paz  - An immense tide of people demonstrating to keep the Bolivian
seat of government in this city took to the streets last week to show
support for the indigenous Aymara and mestizo leadership, in the
greatest expression of popular power in the history of the country.

Laying apathy aside, the people of the western department of La Paz
shattered all political and demographic predictions, coming together as
one body, urban and rural, with deep Aymara cultural roots but embracing
mestizos (of mixed indigenous and Spanish colonial ancestry) settled in
the mountains and Altiplano (high plains).

Immigrants from the country's other eight departments no doubt also
participated in the gathering, which was free of regionalism and
characterised by the solidarity that is typical of Aymara community
traditions.

The mass demonstration on Friday delivered an ultimatum to the
Constituent Assembly to ditch a proposal to move the seat of government
from La Paz to Sucre, the official capital and seat of the judicial
branch, by Aug. 6.

The greatest estimates were that between two and 2.5 million
demonstrators participated in the rally. If confirmed, these estimates
will cast doubt on some official figures.

For instance, the state National Institute of Statistics (INE) said
that in 2005, the population of La Paz department was nearly 2.6
million, of whom 1.6 million lived in La Paz and El Alto.

Experts have also been saying that the population of La Paz is falling
because of mass emigration to the department of Santa Cruz, which has
2.3 million people, according to official figures.

But the sheer size of the rally appears to belie this claim.

Peaceful, colourful, with the red, green and yellow Bolivian flag waving
everywhere, and characterised by the gentleness of the people of the
Altiplano, the social protest last Friday was definitely the largest to
have occurred in the 182 years of Bolivia's independent life, local
observers say.

A few people fainted, but only one person was injured in an accident
with a firecracker.

Aerial photographs shown repeatedly on television show a concentration
of people occupying the whole of the centre of El Alto, on the high
plain next to La Paz, and several kilometres of the highway joining the
two cities, interdepartmental eight-lane highways and smaller roads.

The local daily La Razsn published a satellite image of the crowd which,
three hours after the main speeches, was still unable to disperse
because of the press of people.

If the number of participants reported by the rally's organisers is even
roughly accurate, many things will change in this country of 9.6 million
people, 67 percent of whom are still below the poverty line.

The mass protest will oblige political strategists to revise their
views and regard La Paz as the crucial base for future state policies,
elections of new authorities, or attaining power by democratic means.

The region's power had previously been expressed by the combativeness of
residents of El Alto, who in October 2003 brought down government plans
to export natural gas to the United States and Mexico at prices
regarded as contrary to Bolivia's interests.

They blockaded streets for 15 days, and at least 60 protesters were
killed, in the last of a series of mass social protests in different
parts of the country. Not only was the gas export programme prevented,
but right-wing President Gonzalo Sanchez de Lozada (1993-1997,
2002-2003) was deposed only a year after taking office for the second
time.

This event marked a change in Bolivian politics: it brought the age of
strongman leaders (caudillos) to an end, and empowered dozens of
anonymous residents of the dusty streets of El Alto and campesinos
(small farmers) in the surrounding rural areas, who spearheaded a
movement in defence of natural resources and completely opposed to the
free-market economic model and privatisations.

These new agents of change, with the mayors of both cities and a group
of La Paz citizens, have now returned to the struggle, seeking to keep
hold of the economic activity generated by the presence of the
executive and legislative branches which sit in La Paz.

Meanwhile, the head of government of the department of La Paz, Josi Luis
Paredes, engaged in a political juggling act between the region that
elected him to office and the influential leaders of the eastern
department of Santa Cruz, who want the presidency and congress to move
to Sucre.

Three thousand indigenous people from the province of Omasuyos, 96
kilometres west of La Paz, jealously guarded the head of the column of
demonstrators and kept politicians away from it, in order, they said, to
prevent any distortion of the true purpose of the rally.

They were dressed in red ponchos and multicoloured knitted woollen caps
with a black felt hat atop, and a ceremonial staff tied around the
waist as a symbol of authority.

The same red ponchos have identified insurgent Aymara groups who fought
against Spanish colonialists and indigenous serfdom in republican
times, and inspired guerrilla movements like the now defunct Tupac
Katari Guerrilla Army (EGTK). The present vice president, Alvaro Garcma
Linera, was a leader and ideologue of the EGTK.

Occupying the centre-stage and barring access to traditional
politicians was an act of empowerment for the people of the Altiplano,
but at the same time it reflected an absence of leadership in the form
of someone capable of representing the aspirations of the entire
department of La Paz.

The National Electoral Court (CNE) recorded 3.7 million voters in the
general elections of December 2005, 53.7 percent of whom elected
Bolivia's first indigenous president, Aymara leader Evo Morales of the
leftwing Movement Toward Socialism (MAS).

Many observers say that the lead role is reserved for President
Morales, who prudently abstained from supporting the aim of the
"cabildo" (town meeting), and only commented on its importance.

The department of La Paz extends from mountain peaks and highlands,
across semi-tropical areas and into the Amazon region to the north,
where immense natural wealth remains unexploited.

Although it has proved its ability to mobilise people on a vast scale,
the question of a leader capable of combining the ideas and interests of
indigenous people, mestizos, and middle and high-income sectors remains
unresolved.

The rally was also an opportunity for Andean and Afro-descendant
cultures to meet. Afro-Bolivian culture has been incorporated into the
urban context in the past 10 years, with traditional dances to the
agile rhythm of drums.

Woven woollen cloths spread in the sun, with plenty of good food:
potatoes, maize, fish, roast meat with cheese and red peppers, and a
friendly invitation from campesina women, eased the difficult
rapprochement between city dwellers and indigenous communities.

The plaintive music of Aymara flutes and drums and the cheerful singing
of young people's choirs from the city marked a true pact for the
region. However, its future is uncertain because of the absence of
social and economic projects that go beyond the immediate goal of
keeping the seat of government in La Paz.



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