Bolivian president
Carlos Mesa went tumbling down the throne on June 6, 2005. About 4 lakh were
marching on the streets in La Paz demanding his ouster.
Latin America seems
to have gone into social tremors. Literally every country of the continent is
seeing huge movements generated by the inhuman globalization that has pushed
millions into poverty and the sprawling slums of the cities. The uprooted
miners, labourers, peasants and indigenous people are uniting to wrest back what
liberalisation and privatization has snatched from them. It took almost fifteen
to twenty years for the people to realise about the devastating consequences of
the neo-liberal policies when the real effects of the forces of globalisation
shattered and uprooted their lives. They rose up to challenge the imperialist
and capitalist forces of globalisation and their local henchmen. This, further
precipitated the ruling class contradictions forcing one after the other
presidents to resign. Venezuela, Brazil, Argentina, Paraguay, all have seen a
change of presidents. There are strong anti-regime movements in Peru and Chile.
The mass protest movement in Bolivia has resulted in the change of four
consecutive presidents since the year 2000.
Ecuador president,
Lucio Gutierrez, was forced out of power on April 20, 2005. Two of his
predecessors had met the same fate. In 1997, President Abdala Bucaram was ousted
after only six months in office. Before him Jamil Mahuad was brought down after
two years of his rule. Presidents of Argentina, Bolivia, Peru and Haiti had to
quit in the face of rising revolts and mass protests due to their economic
policies which had pushed the countries into severe economic crises. In 2003,
President Sanchez Lozada of Bolivia was forced out of office after he ordered
army to quell the protesters. The army killed more than sixty persons in three
weeks. And the latest victim of the people’s wrath again became Bolivian
President Carlos Mesa who had succeeded Lozada. He was driven out of office on
June 6, 2005. Two of his associates who were second and third in the line of
succession were forced by the people’s movement not to assume presidency. The
movement was withdrawn only after the Supreme Court justice Eduardo Rodriguez
Veltze accepted the post of president as a stop gap official, promising fresh
elections in December 2005.
The oppressed and
poor Latin American people are in action bringing down their presidents one
after the other. A wide array of political forces is active among the masses
where every one of them wants to push the events in accordance with its own
interest. The case of Bolivia is another example where vast multitudes of people
are grappling with the problem of how to put an end to their miserable
conditions of life, most of them agreeing that it is the imperialist plunder of
their land that has led to the pathetic situation they are in.
The day Carlos Mesa
was to step down a sea of nearly 4,00,000 people were demonstrating in the
capital city, La Paz. Bolivia, a land of only 85 lakh people, is a land locked
country in the Southern American Continent. Its countryside is nearly
obliterated of human population as the imperialist imposed policies of
liberalization have driven millions of rural people, peasants and mine workers
to the cities to seek work there. The devastation caused by the pro-imperialist
economic policies of the government can be gauged from the fact that the
displacement of people from their traditional jobs forced them to come to the
capital city in such huge numbers that El Alto, a city, sprang up on the hills
near La Paz and swelled to one million in population in just 30 years! Here it
is imperative to note that while the rest of the world was thrown open to
unbridled imperialist plunder through the US-led new world economic set up in
the nineties this process has been going on in Latin America since the early
eighties as it has remained in US imperialist control ever since the Spanish
colonialists hold was loosened here in the early nineteenth century. If US
considers Central America as its backyard Latin America is considered by it as
its exclusive sphere of influence.
El Alto has remained
in the forefront of the mass struggle in Bolivia and brought down two
presidents, Lozada and Meso, just in a span of two years. El Alto consists of
uprooted indigenous peasants (called Indians) who flocked to the city as new
policies of the government did not allow them to cultivate their traditional
crops, as a consequence their agriculture was destroyed; miners from the vast
mines which were closed down due to the fact that the imperialists were no
longer interested in tin from Bolivia. Many thousands of families went to other
places in the lower regions to produce coca as their lands now have been taken
up by the US, British and Spanish oil companies because the land they tilled had
gas under it. Since privatization, new estimates of the country’s gas and
petroleum reserves have increased dramatically to 53 trillion cubic feet, second
only to Venezuela on the South American continent. So, the US has reasons to
frown on the people’s movement in Bolivia as most of the Bolivian gas and oil
leads to its destinations in the US (California). Bolivian richness in the
natural energy resources has become a cause for its abject poverty, only because
the imperialist scramble for this source of energy has led to the dispossession
of the masses.
The rulers, one after
the other, have only continued the job of working for the imperialist interests.
The anger of the people subdues with the downfall of one ruler but rises up
again when the ground reality—the relation of the ruling classes with
imperialism—does not change. The local rulers remain compradors; the
imperialists remain the masters of the resources and the de facto rulers working
from Washington. Before we come to deal with the new truce that has come with
the fall of Mesa and coming to power of Rodriguez Veltze let us go through the
events that led to Mesa’s presidency and his subsequent fall where the mass
protest movement has played a leading role all through and forced many of the
political leaders and the church to come up in their true colours. It is a vast
canvas of social turmoil where every force has come up in a truly naked form and
the advance of social consciousness (not yet class consciousness) through action
has made its imprint.
The Fight For Control
Of The Natural Resources
The current struggle
of the dispossessed in Bolivia is centred on the nationalisation issue of gas
resources and to get rid of the politicians who are in cahoots with the
transnational corporations. In 2003, when Gonzalo Sánchez de Lozada was forced
to quit and flee to the US it was water that called the multitudes of the
population to come to the streets and stop the privatization of water and its
exploitation by the multinational companies. The Water Coalition of Cochabamba,
a city in Bolivia, rose up to fight against the government’s decision to
privatise the water system of the city to US-based corporation, Bechtel, in
2000. The huge mass struggle that went on for a full one month in April of that
year forced the government to ditch the plan for privatising water. Bechtel was
kicked in the belly and the government had to put its foot in its own mouth. The
administration of the water system was taken over by the citizens’ and workers’
elected representatives’ self management team. This led to the realisation
throughout Bolivia that people can force the government to retract the
anti-people measures, firing into them a confidence that the have-nots and
illiterate have immense power hidden in them only if they come up united on some
issue. The mass movement for the control of the water system encompassed the
workers, the petti-bourgeois, the commoners, and the poor of the city. Next came
the struggle for oil and natural gas which had been denationalised in Bolivia in
the mid-1990s.
The Bolivian oil and
gas deposits have been a national property since 1937. With the coming of the
multinational companies during many decades that followed, the need arose for
the rulers to again nationalise these resources in 1970. But when privatisation
occurred in the 80s, and new reserves were found, Bolivia became a hotbed of
exploitation for British Gas, Spain’s Repsol and US’s Enron, and some from Chile
and Argentina. A total of $ 3.50 billion was invested in poor Bolivia, where
about 75 percent population is poor, a great majority among them being the
indigenous Indian tribals. The already pauperised people of Bolivia, due to the
pro-imperialist policies of their government, started discussing and taking up
the issue of nationalisation of gas resources. Cochabamba echoed in their
thoughts and many social movements, trade unions and indigenous groups started
rallying around a single point—nationalisation of the gas and oil resources. So,
the Water Coalition from a city level transformed into a Gas Coalition at the
national level.
It was the fight for
control of gas by the nation — i.e., nationalization — which led to a great mass
upheaval in 2003. Here, we want to point out that when the majority of people
considered the issue of nationalization they did not think about who controlled
the State. As was reported in Guardian, London, (11 June, 2005) about a labour
leader from El Alto, Roberto de la Cruz of the El Alto Regional Labor
Confederation (COR), who said: "When we started this fight we were not
interested in changing persons in the governmental palace. The objective was,
and is, to recover gas in favour of the Bolivian State.
The Bolivians were
poor before the denationalisation of gas and oil. They became poorer with
denationalisation while multinationals earned crores in profits. Even the
Bolivians had to purchase oil and gas at the international prices after coming
out from the refineries in adjoining countries, though their state had sold it
cheap to the multinationals. A double exploitation!
The demand for
nationalisation of resources gathered fast support and the movement gained fast
momentum. In September 2003, the Coalition for the Defence and Recovery of Gas
held large-scale demonstrations demanding nationalisation of gas. The whole
country witnessed a massive upsurge against the government which was more
interested in serving imperialist interests than Bolivian. The struggle for gas
was joined by the indigenous people of Altiplano, the area surrounding La Paz,
who were struggling for their own rights and were being brutally suppressed by
the government. The struggle for gas nationalisation, though it went on in all
the major cities of Bolivia, yet the poor of El Alto were in the fore front,
leading the political onslaughts on the government.
The Bolivian Workers
Federation or COB, the El Alto Regional Labor Confederation (COR), and the
Movement Toward Socialism (MAS), were an important part of the 2003 movement.
With the killing of
sixty people at the hands of the Bolivian army in the streets of La Paz, the El
Alto raised the demand for Lozada’s resignation and prosecution. The government
forces could not match the surging crowds of the militant people who indulged in
street battles with the police and army. More deaths ensued and Lozada came to
face opposition in his own government. Mesa, his vice president, denounced the
use of force. Lozado fled the country, and assuming charge, Mesa promised to
hold a referendum on natural gas in 2004.
Evo Morales, the
leader of the Movement Toward Socialism (MAS), whose party is the second largest
block in the Bolivian Congress, played a central role in politically disarming
the mass movement that erupted in 2003 and allowing Mesa’s installation as the
new president.
But Mesa, who was
another representative of the ruling classes serving imperialism, backed out
from his commitment, and the referendum he carried on the issue of gas had no
word of "nationalization" in it. The people rejected the referendum by writing
"nationalization" across the ballots as asked by COB and most of the other
organizations fighting for nationalization.
But Mesa "used the
referendum results to justify his own neoliberal policies on the gas issue. He
vowed that he would neither break nor renegotiate existing contracts with the
transnationals. Mesa did agree to have Congress draft a new Hydrocarbon Law, but
he expected it would not be much of a blow to the transnationals’ mega-profits,"
thus wrote a commentator.
Morales campaigned in
favor of the July 2004 gas referendum, telling people that voting "yes"
would mean imposing 50 percent royalties on transnational oil companies.
"Last March,
however, Congress passed a Hydrocarbon Law that took Mesa by surprise. The new
law not only kept an already existing requirement that levied 18 percent
royalties on the profits of transnational gas corporations, but it also tacked
on another 32 percent in taxes." The additional taxes contained in the
measure antagonized foreign companies that have been reaping massive profits
from the exploitation of Bolivia’s natural gas reserves. Mesa was furious that
the law was too anti-transnational. It also fueled the wealthy elite’s,
especially that of the eastern districts’, passion for autonomy.
Many participating in
the movement for nationalisation objected to the 18 percent-plus-32 percent
formula, preferring a straight 50 percent royalty. This was another twist in the
nationalization movement — settling for increased royalties rather than
nationalization.
As a study prepared
by the Center of Information and Documentation of Bolivia points out, these
"sales" are in any case fabricated, with the gas passing from a Boli-vian
subsidiary of the Spanish energy giant Repsol, for example, to an Argentine or
Chilean subsidiary of the same corporation.
"Under these
conditions, once Bolivian gas crosses the border, it is converted into
thermo-electricity, liquefied natural gas, methanol (bound for the US and
Europe) and other petrochemical products, which allows the transnationals to
reap enormous profits at Bolivia’s expense," the study declares.
The New Wave of
Struggle for Nationalisation
Things came to a head
in May 2005, that had been brewing since April 2004 when the so-called
referendum on gas was carried out. The people were living with a sense of
betrayal shown by the new president. In May, Mesa ordered a decree calling for
an assembly and a referendum. Just a week before the mid-May protests the
Bolivian Congress rejected the nationalisation demand and decided to take a
decision, instead, on holding a referendum for regional autonomy and not on the
nationalisation of natural gas. The regional autonomy in today’s concrete
context of Bolivia is: giving autonomy to the oil rich regions where the white
settler minority owns vast lands and gas deposits. The "autonomy referendum"
is obviously meant to placate the transnationals through the wealthy political
elite of these oil-rich eastern states of Bolivia, especially Santa Cruz. These
capitalists forces "with ties to" imperialist capital dominated
transnationals "have threatened secession since October 2003 as a way of
avoiding the nationalization of oil and gas." This dangerous decree from the
president and the decision of the assembly further enraged the workers, peasants
and poor and middle class masses of Bolivia and ignited their frenzy. The
indigenous people of Bolivia constitute more than sixty percent of the
population and are predominantly engaged in agriculture and work as miners.
Their radicalization, due to the economic crises and dislocation, has brought
them in conflict with the state along with other poor and middle class people.
The unity of these
two vast sections of society became the danger signal for the exploiting
comprador elite classes which want to break up the country in as many segments
possible as their masters would require, in case the situation goes out of their
control.
The US state
department spokesman, Richard Boucher, said in early June that Washington was
"in contact with the [Bolivian] government, we are also in contact with other
nations that are very concerned and worried by the situation there." These
other nations are apparently the presidents Nestor Kirchner of Argentina and
Luiz Inacio Lula da Silva of Brazil. The so-called "left" governments of these
two countries pose their governments as alternatives to Washington’s policies in
Latin America while vigorously following the line of the US imperialists and
preside over the heads of the people with "left" phrase mongering while carrying
on the same exploitative relations. They have only taken up some pro-people
measures to hoodwink the masses. Likewise, they both fear the potential domestic
impact of a continuing revolutionary crisis in Bolivia.
Boucher added that US
discussions with the besieged government of Carlos Mesa were on the "security
situation, about the situation as regards democracy and maintaining the
democracy in Bolivia." Another US imperialist master told the Congressional
sub committee on May 25, that "We are very concerned about serious challenges
to Bolivia’s stability from radical opposition groups that threaten the
country’s hard-won gains in democracy, economic development, and the fight
against drug trafficking."
The whole thrust
pointed that the US was considering intervening into Bolivia under the name of
"democracy" and the "fight against drug trafficking." The unchallenged leader of
the imperialist world was very much afraid of the democracy the people were
enjoying through their fight against the imperialist exploiters and their local
henchmen. The people had come on the streets and were ready to engage in
serious battles as many of the miners were carrying dynamite sticks in their
hands and waving and throwing these at the armed forces men. The awakened
people were becoming a headache for the thug US.
The mood of the
militant masses could be guessed from their determination to take on the
military forces as one of them said that "We will even take up arms if the
need arise to force nationalization of the gas resources."
The mobilization of
the people was continuous and the city of La Paz was surrounded by tens of
thousands of people of the El Alto Federation of Neighbourhood Associations (FEJUVE)
from May 16. On this day itself, the people of Cochabamaba symbolically took
over a refinery. All roads leading to the city of La Paz were blocked. More than
55 road blockades disrupted the main highways and commerce in seven of Bolivia’s
nine departments or states. The El Alto Refional Labour Confederation called for
a general strike to begin on May 23. The Gas Coalition, Workers Federation (COB)
and Bolivian Peasant Worker Union (CSUTCB) and teachers and miners organizations
supported the call and the whole of La Paz was blocked and paralyzed. Indigenous
people from Aymara tried to occupy the presidential palace, Plaza de Murillo,
and enter the Congress building on May 24. The street battles between the
protesters and police continued for the whole day, with police using batons and
tear gas and with ready to shoot snipers from the roof tops waiting for orders
to shoot on the people. The people were able to push the police back and reach
up to 60 feet of the Congress building. May 26 was declared a truce day by the
people due to a religious holiday. Not only La Paz but also Sucre, situated at a
distance of 200 miles in the South, Santa Cruz in the East and all other major
cities were rocked by the surging crowds of the people. It looked as if the
people had taken over the country everywhere and there was no government. The
streets were in the hands of the people. The general strike really looked like a
festival of the masses.
Meanwhile, on June 8,
after receiving the green light from Pope Benedict XVI, the Catholic Church in
Bolivia called for a national dialogue-to unify the interests of the Bolivian
land oligarchy and pro-transnational gas elite of the eastern states, on the one
hand, with those of the moderate reform sectors of the popular movements, on the
other. The moderate reform sectors include Evo Morales’s Movement Toward
Socialism party (MAS), which, with Mesa, has repeatedly called for Church
involvement. Later priests called from the pulpit for social peace, the
abandonment of "extremism" and the reconciliation of the rich and the poor. But
unions, social movement organizations and the radicalized base of peasant and
indigenous movements clearly rejected this initiative.
The people again
marched on La Paz on May 30 and refused to follow the demand of the MAS that the
truce be extended to May 31 to give time to the assembly to consider the
referendum on the question of autonomy and of convening a Constituent Assembly.
Obviously, Evo Morales did not want the people to press for nationalization. But
the upsurge continued to swell more and more, till on June 6th Mesa was forced
to kiss the dust.
The Various Forces
Meanwhile, the
various political forces engaged in the whole turmoil were having their own
agendas to pursue. Demands for Mesa’s ouster not only came from the residents of
the El Alto poor but also the Eastern Agricultural Chamber, representing the
country’s wealthy farmers. They wanted Mesa to crush the people’s revolt. Mr
Vaca Diez, whose ouster was demanded by the agitating masses, wanted to take up
the presidency after Mesa’s exit. He, an agri-businessman from the gas rich
eastern state of Santa Cruz, belongs to the Leftist Movement Revolution, and had
the support of the National Revolution Movement party of the former president
Gonzalo Sanchez de Lozada. He and the second next in line to him, the chairman
and the leader of the lower house, Mario Cossio, had to bow out in the face of
the growing demand of the people for their heads. See the names of their
parties: "Leftist", "Revolutionary", and yet are mere imperialist boot-lickers.
Movement Towards
Socialism (MAS) leader Evo Morales, who is a parliamentarian and fears the
extra-parliamentary militant mass action on the streets did not associate
himself with even the demand of "nationalization" for the bourgeois state let
alone for a transition to Socialism. He tried to prolong Mesa’s regime by
calling on the people first to vote in the April 2004 referendum, and later when
Mesa was facing the deluge of the Bolivian masses in May and June this year he
called on the people to accept regime’s proposal for referendum on autonomy and
constituent assembly to divert the target fire. He tried to substitute autonomy
for nationalization. It is another sure way of securing Bolivia for the
imperialists. He wants his way to presidency through the so-called "democratic
elections" as he could see that most of his followers in the workers and poor
sections had switched over to the position of deman-ding the resignation of
Mesa. He got afraid of the radicalizing effect of the movement.
Later, Evo appealed
Even most ‘leftists’
did not tell the people that the answer to globalization and liberalization was
not the nationalisation of resources staying in the hands of the reactionary
state but to smash the state itself, for a real break with imperialisms. The
crucial question of the state was left untouched and fire was only directed at
one or two persons rather than on the system as a whole. Unfortunately the
Maoists in the sub-continent are still weak and only they that could provide the
real answer.
The leaders of the
current social upheaval in Latin America that set in motion the likes of Lula,
Chavez and others, do not believe in dismantling the old reactionary and
anti-people state structure to replace it with a new state of the workers and
peasants and the nationalist sections in the bourgeois forces. In reality they
want to go along with the existing semi-colonial state structure and system with
some modifications, while blaring rhetoric, sometimes socialist, sometimes
Bolivarian. This is no alternative to imperialism, imperialist globalization,
liberlisation, et al within the existing system. This becomes obvious from the
fact that one after the other such states go tumbling at the feet of one or the
other imperialists. Even if they adopt some radical measures for too long they
run the risk of going Allende’s way, making way for the worst kind of
dictatorial rule over the people in the absence of a real preparation to
confront the evil forces of imperialism. The people, on their part are
continuing their glorious tradition of fighting against the forces of
exploitation and oppression while leaderships are afraid to lead them to real
victories over the local reactionary classes and their imperialist masters. Even
in the current phase of the Bolivian struggle the army threatened to intervene,
in case the movement gets more radicalized for a real revolution of the people.
The US was ready to move its pawns in the game. It still has, though in a covert
way.
MAS has become
instrumental again in suspending the current struggle for nationalization under
the pretext of giving time to the new president. The new president may not be an
affiliate to a particular ruling class party like Mesa but he represents the
same class interests of exploiters that have ruled this country for long. He has
promised an "electoral process" for solving the problems facing the country. The
trap has worked because the leaders spearheading the movement have not prepared
the masses to grapple with the question of a real alternative to imperialism.
The ‘left’ presidents in the South American Continent are not rare to find these
days. But a real left alternative is still a cry. The people are ready for
change, the leaders are not. So we can expect that the people would be in the
streets again when December comes.
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