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Joanne98 Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Mon Nov-26-07 01:07 AM
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Death and Sedition in Bolivia!
http://www.ubnoticias.org/en/article/death-and-sedition-in-bolivia

Four deaths in Sucre intensify the confrontation
Luis A. Gómez
November 25, 2007

La Paz - It’s possible that it all began in March 2006 when the Evo Morales government negotiated the Constituent Assembly’s representative base. The right-wing parties—defeated from almost every angle by the social movements over the past few years—were allowed new breathing room and maintained, together with the governing party, its monopoly of the political representation in Bolivia.

Or maybe it began in July of last year when the Assembly delegate elections left Evo’s MAS without their hoped for two-thirds majority. At this moment, it was clear that this new body—charged with creating a new carta magna to represent the Bolivia that had risen from the streets and its recent struggles—would become hostage to the country’s rightwing minority via its political parties.

Either way, one thing is clear: the blame for the deaths yesterday and today in the city of Sucre goes to both the right and to the government, perhaps in equal measure.

Wasted Time
Months of deliberation spent on securing procedural measures that no one even respects. Months of debate, physical beatings, screaming matches, marches and vigils in favor of and against. The result? After a full year of work, not a single article, not one solid agreement was made between the government and the opposition regarding the country’s new constitution. Thus, it was decided that the Assembly’s sessions be extended until December 14th of this year. Nothing has been achieved since.

The struggle around whether articles ought to be approved by simple majority or two-thirds of the delegates’ votes allowed the rightwing to consistently block and blackmail. The opposition party PODEMOS took charge of impeding the Assembly’s every step—at times with a solid right hook to the chin of a fellow delegate. More recently, they found another stalling mechanism: the semi-colonial Capital Wars, putting the question of whether La Paz or Sucre was to hold the honor of seat of government forever.

The days passed and millions of Bolivians filled the streets of Sucre, Santa Cruz and La Paz demanding that the capital move, that it stay, that the Assembly be allowed to decide matter, that the decision should be in the public’s hands. Bolivia’s struggle was thus reduced to this: the capital’s location and the defense of a building in which 255 non-functional delegates would session with the grand result of never agreeing on anything.

Approval at any cost
Yesterday, under orders from President Evo Morales, MAS delegates moved the Assembly to Sucre’s military barracks. The street mobilizations backed by right-wing Santa Cruz leaders for the past few months had made it impossible for the Assembly to continue its work in the public theater where they had been held since August 2006.

The normally quiet streets of this small colonial city became a battlefield on November 24th: students and citizen groups went at the police with escalating intensity while the latter responded with tear gas and rubber bullets.

During the confrontation, 29 year old lawyer Gonzalo Dúran was killed by a bullet to the chest. His comrades in sedition became enraged. The body was placed in a coffin and all seemed to have reached a boiling point. Accompanied by a member of Bolivia’s Human Rights Assembly, Sucre’s governor, MAS party member Daniel Sánchez, entered the barracks where the delegates were meeting in desperation.

Sánchez asked Assembly President and former coca-grower leader Silvia Lazarte to stop the session. Lazarte refused. Shortly after, the MAS-proposed version of the new Constitutional text was approved “in full.”

This approval of a new Constitution at any cost, this conceit on the part of the ruling party, may have caused the flood waters to spill. As a colleague in Sucre recounted to us via telephone, “the people have now seriously mobilized against the government.”

The Media’s Attack
The rightwing media are sending reports from all corners of the country. In Sucre, they give us democracy’s heroes: an angry mob that has vandalized the city and stormed a local prison letting lose dozens of felons.

Since yesterday, television networks such as Unitel and ATB (both owned by the Spanish media group PRISA), are blaming the government for Sucre’s state of siege. They claim that Dúran’s death was police repression and that yesterday’s delegate session was illegal and is evidence of a dictatorship. They fail to report that Dúran’s forensic report finds that the fatal bullet comes from a gun-type not used by the police. Not to mention the fact that, as the Minister of the Presidency Juan Ramón Quintana points out, the police were not armed this weekend in Sucre.

In between repetitive images of Sucre’s streets as battlefields, the networks broadcast the event’s rippling effects nationwide. They report on aggressive and premeditated acts as if they were spontaneous occurrences—the most notable of which occurred in Santa Cruz at dawn this morning. An angry group appeared in front of the house of MAS politician Osvaldo Peredo where several Cuban doctors also live. After screaming insults against the government, the group threw a Molotov cocktail towards the residence. Fortunately, there was only material—not human—damage. Similarly, TV images show groups of young Santa Cruz residents violently attacking the regional tax office headquarters.

In a most non-spontanteous way, the media went on to interview every conceivable opposition politician across the country, including ex-President Jorge “Tuto” Quiroga and Santa Cruz governor Rubén Costas—who dared the government to respond and spoke seditiously on behalf of all Bolivians.

An interesting side-note: some of Bolivia’s independent media outlets are having transmission problems. The internet signal of Radio Erbol (owned by the Catholic Church) is unavailable in certain parts of the country where there is normally a signal. Many journalists—employees of Erbol and its affiliate station in Sucre—have received death threats. Many of Sucre’s few independent reporters, according to UB sources, are in hiding.

Evo Defends His Project
Sucre’s air is heavy with gas and people are mobilized in the streets. A few hours ago, the city police chief announced the withdrawal of police forces in the city because of a lack of safety guarantees: not only had his officers been assaulted, but also one of their own had been lynched and thrown into a ravine early this morning. Transit Police headquarters were burned throughout the day and mobs went around lighting on fire any state vehicles that crossed their path.

It was in these fateful moments, that the President of Bolivia appeared serious and somber before his nation to defend his project and his government. Just after 3pm, Evo Morales explained the minutea of the recently approved Constitution in painstaking detail. He spoke for over 10 minutes without mentioning the four deaths on the other side of the country.

Once getting to the topic of the confrontations, he asserted that his government would convene a full investigation into the weekend’s incidents and reiterated that the government had not instructed the police to use lethal weapons against the population.

“Those who want to bet on our Bolivia, on the Bolivia of change,” said Evo, are more than welcome. He critiqued those who impeded this process of change, specifically those in Santa Cruz united behind the infamous Civic Committee and its President Branco Marinkovic. “They can’t accept that we the poor people can govern ourselves,” he snapped, after going over the long list of obstacles the Constituent Assembly has confronted over the past 16 months.

Evo also pleaded the Bolivian people to remain calm, warning that the new constitution must now be approved by national democratic referendum, as legally stipulated. “We will continue working together with the social forces and with the people of this country who want change,” he stated while refuting the right-wing’s accusations that he is a dictator and an assassin.

“I want to ask the Bolivian people for serenity and the Bolivian authorities for their support in securing peace and social justice,” the Head of State concluded. He had spoken for almost 30 minutes yet practically no major television channel broadcast Evo’s words. Almost all were carrying their normally scheduled programs.

Despite it all, there are four (perhaps five) dead in Sucre. The principle opposition leaders are already calling for Evo Morales’ head. The government insists on moving forward with its Constitutional project regardless of its less than two-thirds majority in the Assembly. We will continue informing.
http://www.ubnoticias.org/en/article/death-and-sedition-in-bolivia

keep track of all these RW fuckers down there so we can get even later!

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Judi Lynn Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Mon Nov-26-07 04:47 AM
Response to Original message
1. Why would the right-wing uprising, someone appearing to be knocked off in the crowd, right-wing news
media agitating for a wild and crazy public reaction to the events, blaming it on the President and his ruling party, and the SABOTAGE OF ANY OTHER NEWS MEDIA sound familiar?

It's because someone planned the same operation prior to the conflict in Venezuela in April, 2004. It was probably revealed to these lumps when they were flown to Washington, D.C. to confer with White House officials prior to the uprising.

How many times does this have to happen before some of the really slow ones in this country start a slight awakening, long enough to ask themselves, "Hey, didn't this already happen before?" Before their short attention spans turns back to sports, shopping, or bothering Democrats on internet message boards for Democrats, you'd think they'd want to shake off the ignorance and start learning something about what has been happening in Latin America for the last 50+ years, since the U.S. right-wing Presidents have stuck their long, ugly snouts into the destinies and lives of Latin Americans by destabilizing, bribing, overthrowing their governments and setting up genocidal dictators in place of popularly elected Presidents.

Who does NOT see the connections? A lot of drunks, and down right stupid, disgusting, infantile idiots, who envision world events as one big, simply drawn cartoon show, with the right-wing the only people who should be permitted to govern. It should be more than clear to anyone else.
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bemildred Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Mon Nov-26-07 08:37 AM
Response to Reply #1
3. Well, as you know, it's a very old formula for stalling social/political change.
The spooks seem to be trying to re-cycle it again in Venezuela too. Must be the 4th or 5th time that I can remember. I suppose the theory is that sooner or later it will "work", and they never look past that point to consider how long it will "work", or at what cost.
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Judi Lynn Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Mon Nov-26-07 05:41 AM
Response to Original message
2. For whatever good it may do, here's a crude google Spanish to English translation
of a Telesur report on what Evo Morales had to say in his speech concerning the conflict in Sucre:
President Evo Morales repudiate violent events in Sucre
TeleSUR _ 25/11/07 - 15:56 CCS | send | print

Evo Morales alleged that "some groups oligárquicos, conservatives, neo-liberals, do not want a new constitution''but''wanted dead.'' The oligarchy''does not accept that an Indian is President of the Republic.''
- Bolivian Minister reported that spokesmen for the right were anticipating violence in Sucre
- Bolivia has new constitution despite opposition boycott and violence

In a televised message addressed Sunday to Bolivians, the president Evo Morales called on the population to remain calm and tranquility and promised to be investigated acts of violence in which two people were killed this weekend in the city Sucre.

The governor reiterated that Bolivia will continue in a democracy, fighting for change and changes posed with his proposal refound the country on the path of peace and social justice.

He said that "unfortunately, there have been groups that have encouraged the destruction of Sucre" where he resumed this Friday from the whole of the Constituent Assembly and was approved Saturday, after a marathon meeting, the full text of the new Constitution.

Morales claimed that the opposition groups are only waiting for the December 14 "so as not to be able to adopt the new constitution", the deadline for completing this process.

He accused directly to the extreme right coup led by the Social Democratic Power alliance (we), whose leader is former president Jorge Quiroga, having promoted and planned violence in Sucre.

"They wanted dead," lamented the ruler, who recalled that the oligarchy "does not accept that an Indian is President of the Republic".

"Surely some groups oligárquicos, conservatives, neo-liberals, do not want a new Constitution and for that from the beginning tried to close the Constituent Assembly," he said.

"They do not accept that the poor too can govern," he said, noting that although there is little that can be done within two years of government, the priority is the homeland and its autonomy.

Morales called for peace and calm and assured that those responsible must be brought to justice. "We do not share regret but also repudiate" the violent events.

"We very much regret the facts of blood. Never the government has commissioned the Armed Forces to use firearms. About this we want an independent investigation, urgent, impartial," insisted.

http://www.telesurtv.net/secciones/noticias/nota/21170/presidente-evo-morales-repudio-hechos-violentos-ocurridos-en-sucre/
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Joanne98 Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Mon Nov-26-07 08:59 AM
Response to Reply #2
4. Thanx Judi!
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