Is a U.S.-Approved Coup Under Way in Bolivia?
http://www.alternet.org/audits/99832/
Bolivian President Evo Morales announces that a coup d'etat by right-
wing regional governors is under way.                             On
Monday, Sept. 15, Bolivian President Evo Morales arrived in Santiago,
Chile for an emergency meeting of Latin American leaders that convened
to seek a resolution to the recent conflict in Bolivia. Upon his
arrival, Morales said, "I have come here to explain to the presidents
of South America the civic coup d'etat by governors in some Bolivian
states in recent days. This is a coup in the past few days by the
leaders of some provinces, with the takeover of some institutions, the
sacking and robbery of some government institutions and attempts to
assault the national police and the armed forces."

Morales was arriving from his country, where the smoke was still
rising from a week of right-wing government opposition violence that
left the nation paralyzed, at least 30 people dead, and businesses,
government and human rights buildings destroyed.

During the same week, Morales declared Philip Goldberg, the U.S.
ambassador in Bolivia, a "persona non grata" for "conspiring against
democracy" and for his ties to the Bolivian opposition. The recent
conflict in Bolivia and the subsequent meeting of presidents raise the
questions: What led to this meltdown? Whose side is the Bolivian
military on? And what does the Bolivian crisis and regional reaction
tell us about the new power bloc of South American nations?

Massacre in Pando

On Sept. 11, in the tropical Bolivian department of Pando, which
borders Brazil and Peru, a thousand pro-Morales men, women and
children were heading toward Cobija, the department's capital, to
protest the right-wing Gov. Leopoldo Fernández and his thugs' takeover
of the city and airport.

According to press reports and eyewitness accounts, when the
protesters arrived at a bridge 7 kilometers outside the town of
Porvenir, they were ambushed by assassins hired and trained by
Fernández. Snipers in the treetops shot down on the unarmed
campesinos. Shirley Segovia, a Porvenir resident, recalled to
Bolpress, "We were killed like pigs, with machine guns, with rifles,
with shotguns, with revolvers. The campesinos had only brought their
teeth, clubs and slingshots, they didn't bring rifles. After the first
shots, some fled to the river Tahuamanu, but they were followed and
shot at." Others reported being tortured; days later the death toll
rose to 30, with dozens wounded and more than 100 still missing.
Roberto Tito, a farmer who was present at the conflict, said, "This
was a massacre of farmers; this is something that we should not
allow."

In 2006, Fernández, who denies orchestrating this violence, was
denounced by then Government Minister Alicia Muñoz, who said the
governor was training at least 100 paramilitaries as a "citizen's
protection" force. These paramilitaries are believed to have
participated in the massacre. Fernández is one of the opposition
governors who form part of the National Democratic Council (CONALDE),
an organization that includes governors from Santa Cruz, Beni, Pando,
Tarija and Chuquisaca and who are organizing for departmental autonomy
against the Morales government and his administration's redistribution
of land and natural gas wealth, and other socialistic policies.

After the massacre, Morales declared a state of siege in Pando and
sent in the military, and by Sept. 15 a tense peace had reportedly
returned to the region. Morales also called for the arrest of
Fernández, who fled across the border into rural Brazil. (Fernández
has since been arrested and taken to the Bolivian capital.)

This massacre took place just weeks after an Aug. 10 national recall
vote invigorated Morales' mandate: He won 67 percent support
nationwide, showing that his staunch, violent opponents are clearly in
the minority. In Pando, Morales won 53 percent of the vote, an
increase of 32 percent from the 21 percent he received from Pando
residents during the presidential election in 2005.

A few key political developments led to this recent increase in
regional tension. On Aug. 28, Morales announced a presidential decree
establishing a Dec. 7 referendum on the constitution, which was
rewritten and passed in a constituent assembly in December 2007. On
Sept. 2 of this year, the electoral court said it opposed the
referendum because it had to first be passed by Congress and the
opposition-controlled Senate. The debate revived existing conflicts,
and opposition leaders began to block major roads and seized an
airport in Cobija on Sept. 5.

The days leading up to the Sept. 11 massacre in Pando were full of
anti-government protesters ransacking businesses and human rights
organizations across the country. On Sept. 10, an explosion reportedly
set off by opposition groups disrupted the flow of gas lines to Brazil
from Tarija, Bolivia.

U.S. Ambassadors Expelled

Following these tumultuous events, Morales demanded that Goldberg, the
US. ambassador, leave the country. "Without fear of anyone, without
fear of the empire, today before you, before the Bolivian people, I
declare the ambassador of the United States persona non grata,"
Morales said. "The ambassador of the United States is conspiring
against democracy and wants Bolivia to break apart."



123Next page »

--~--~---------~--~----~------------~-------~--~----~
Thanks for being part of "PoliticalForum" at Google Groups.
For options & help see http://groups.google.com/group/PoliticalForum

* Visit our other community at http://www.PoliticalForum.com/  
* It's active and moderated. Register and vote in our polls. 
* Read the latest breaking news, and more.
-~----------~----~----~----~------~----~------~--~---

Reply via email to