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Full: http://www.cipamericas.org/archives/2810

“These people are gringos who are coming here with NGOs. Take it
somewhere else. These people’s stomachs are full enough”, said the
president of Ecuador, Rafael Correa, in reference to the protesters
who belong to the National Confederation of the Indigenous in Ecuador
(CONAIE) [1]. Evo Morales said almost the same thing: “Since the Right
can’t find arguments for opposing the process of change, it’s using
rural, indigenous or original people leaders who have been paid off in
special favors by NGOs”.[2].

It seems the presidents of both countries have neglected to realize
that they are using the same arguments as their enemies when they
accuse social movements of being part of the “international communist
subversion” or of being financed by “Moscow gold”. They’re making two
mistakes in one: believing that the indigenous can be manipulated, and
believing that the manipulation comes from outside the country. It
isn’t surprising that the indigenous have interpreted the statements
of their presidents as insults meant to distract attention from real
problems.

However, it is possible that USAID, a United States aid organization,
has infiltrated some social movements and encouraged actors to protest
against the government, as per statements by the Vice President of
Bolivia, Álvaro García Linera. He notes that, of the 100 million
dollars that USAID invests in his country, 20 million is used for
technical costs and the rest “for their friends and their political
clients, for sponsoring courses, publications and groups that promote
conflict”[3].

The social organizations involved in the protests refused funding from
USAID, though what is most striking is that this critique hasn’t come
to light before, but just when people have begun to demonstrate
against the government. The head minister of Hydrocarbon in Morales’
administration went even further and reminded the president that he
owed everyone an explanation as to why he allowed USAID, the World
Bank and European ONGs to design the current Plurinational State. In
fact, “In 2004, USAID financed the Coordinating Unit for the
Constitutional Assembly”, among other official activities[4].

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CONAIE versus Correa

The presidential summit of The Bolivarian Alliance for the Peoples of
Our America was held on June 5. The eight presidents convened in
Otavalo, about 60 kilometers north of Quito, a city with a Quichua
majority. Despite the issue at hand, indigenous organizations were not
invited to attend. This is why the CONAIE decided to install their
Plurinational Parliament in the same city, with the intention of
insisting that there can be no plurinationality without indigenous
peoples.

Around three thousand people participated in a peaceful march through
the city. They sang and danced in honor of the Inty Raymi, the Andean
New Year, and they also remembered the twentieth anniversary of the
first Indian uprising, which began the mobilization process which
finally brought Rafael Correa to presidency. Mounted policemen stood
guard over the building where the summit was held, and their horses
were frightened by the arrival of the protesters when they reached the
door to deliver a letter to their “brother” Evo Morales.

The indigenous are in opposition to the government over water laws and
concessions to mining companies. This has caused numerous
demonstrations, strikes, blockades and uprisings[13]. The conflict
between the CONAIE and the government isn’t new, though it has now
acquired a more serious tinge due to judicial accusations against the
leaders. On the next day of the summit, the Public Prosecutor’s Office
of the Province of Imbabura, where Otavalo is located, began an
investigation against the indigenous organizations.

According to this investigation, “a group of citizens of indigenous
race” broke the police barrier around the ALBA meeting “shouting
slogans which disturbed public order”, and the main damage occurred
when a policeman was “robbed of his handcuffs”. On these grounds, the
leaders of the CONAIE and Ecuarunari (the Quechua organization of the
highlands) are being accused of nothing less than “sabotage and
terrorism” [14]. This is a very serious accusation which aims to
intimidate the leaders.

According to lawyer and university professor Mario Melo, at the heart
of the problem is that the CONAIE’s presence outside of the meeting
grounds “made evident, before national and international public
opinion, that the organizations which represent the many nationalities
and peoples of Ecuador are being excluded from the process of defining
the political policies that concern them” [15]. There has been a
political response disguised as legal action in order to “intimidate
and demobilize” the movements.

The indigenous leaders reacted to the challenge. Marlon Santi,
president of the CONAIE, came before the public prosecutor to hear the
charges and give his version of the events. On July 5, a joint
communication from Ecuarunari and CONAIE indicated that the
accusations of terrorism lack legal grounds and are “a political
persecution of the indigenous movement and its leaders for the simple
act of disagreeing with government policies” [16].

The message contains a reminder that article 98 of the new
constitution recognizes the “right to resistance” when rights are
endangered. And it ends with a sentence that anticipates more
confrontations: “The legal charges against the leaders only serve to
make evident the mean spiritedness of the rulers, as well as a serious
threat to the peace and democracy of Ecuadorians”.

Pérez Guartambel, president of the Azuay Union of Community Water
Systems in Cuenca, was also accused of sabotage and terrorism because
of a massive protest in his town, Tarqui, on May 4. The Women’s
Pachamama Defense Front has made similar complaints. Though the
phenomenon that is not so wide spread in Bolivia, all signs point to
the fact that the process taking place in Ecuador implies a deep
rupture between social movements and the government.

There is a chasm between the two, and the dividing line is the
national project and so called “development”. Correa is convinced that
the greatest threat to his project, which he calls “twenty first
century Socialism”, come from what he calls the “infantile” left and
from environmental and indigenous groups which he claims reject
modernity. He criticizes those who “say no to petroleum, to mines, to
using our non renewable resources. It’s like a beggar sitting on a bag
full of gold”[17].

Taking the Plurinational State to Task

The social and political processes in both countries are like two peas
in a pod. Both approved a Plurinational State and new constitutions,
but when it came time to apply their ideas they were faced with
serious obstacles. The indigenous base groups and the urban popular
sectors brought Morales and Correa to power, and those same groups are
now protesting against “their” governments. In both cases, the
governments opted for mineral and petroleum extractivism in order to
ensure fiscal profits, instead of working toward the Buen Vivir, as
per their promises.

The Federation of Neighborhood Councils of El Alto (FEJUVE), one of
the most important social organizations in Bolivia, published a harsh
document called the Political Manifesto of the Sixteenth Ordinary
Congress[18]. It states that “in spite of having an indigenous
president like Evo Morales, the State continues to be governed by a
creole oligarchy” because “it continues to maintain a capitalist
economic system and a neoliberal political system”. The document goes
on to say that the poor people continue to be “politically dominated”,
“economically exploited” and “racially and culturally marginalized”.

Even more troubling, “The MAS government, after stepping into power,
has merely used the indigenous peoples and members of popular sectors
for their political campaigns, but they continue to be excluded from
political decisions and are only used by the government to legitimize
itself and as stepladders to their seats of power”. Furthermore, it
demands that the government not interfere in social organizations,
that there be a change in the behavior of Vice President Álvaro García
Linera and his colleagues, who are defined as “enemies of the peasant
and indigenous class”, and it supports the march of the peoples of the
Orient.

Both the tone and the content are intense. The FEJUVE isn’t just any
organization; it was one of the protagonists of the Bolivian gas
conflict, in October of 2003, which led to the fall of Gonzalo Sánchez
de Lozada and caused the collapse of neoliberalism. Right now, the
group is considering asking for the resignation of Morales. In
Ecuador, the CONAIE is also very important; it has been the
protagonist of a dozen uprisings since 1990, and has toppled three
governments. Breaking off with any of these organizations is very
serious for any government, and is especially serious for those that
rely on them for support.

What can be seen here are the first cracks in the Plurinational State,
a building which still hasn’t been fully constructed. These cracks are
appearing because there is a potent dispute for power. The original
peoples have no reason to accept the framework of the Nation State,
which is what the Plurinational State is based on. Two perspectives
can be noted which attempt to shed light on this process.

"Albert Acosta, Ecuadorian economist and former president of the
Constitutional Assembly, posits that it is crucial that laws be passed
in language that is rooted in everyday life. If this doesn’t happen,
no matter how advanced the Constitution is it will mean nothing. The
problem is that President Correa believes that laws about water and
communication aren’t important, which, for Acosta, is the same as
saying that “the Constitution is neither fundamental nor a priority”.
He wonders: “Could it be that President Correa sees the Constitution
as a straight jacket?” [19]

He believes that opposition from the right, which opposed the
Constitution, is setting up road blocks for the laws in order to
impede change. Oh the other hand, “Correa’s method of governing, which
is, essentially, a knock down and run over leadership, leaves no room
for debate”. His conclusion is that the Constitution that was meant to
rediscover the government “is tied up in a political bundle that
doesn’t guarantee its validity”. At the government level “there is a
sort of legal counterrevolution” which is not supported by society at
large."

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