Thread Rating:
  • 0 Vote(s) - 0 Average
  • 1
  • 2
  • 3
  • 4
  • 5
Time for a new relationship with Bolivia
#1
http://www.commondreams.org/view/2010/01/23-4
It's Time for a New Relationship With Bolivia

by Doug Hertzler
Evo Morales is the most popular President Bolivia has ever had, winning re-election last month with 64% of the vote in spite of the fact that he is often at loggerheads with Bolivia's upper classes who have control over the country's print and television media.

Evo Morales and representatives of the US government have a history of tense relations as well. The situation dates back to the 1980s, when the United States government declared the War on Drugs and Evo Morales became a leader of a federation of indigenous farmers' unions representing the growers of the coca plant. US policy of forced eradication of the coca plant turned Morales' home community into a war zone.

While coca leaf is often processed into concentrated cocaine to meet consumer demand in the US and elsewhere, it has a very different significance in Bolivian culture. Millions of Bolivians chew the leaf daily, because in its natural form coca acts as a harmless stimulant similar to coffee, and the leaves have been central to indigenous religious rituals for centuries. Imagine how US citizens might respond if a foreign power declared war on both their morning cup of coffee and their Sunday communion wafers.

The Morales government has been quite serious about its policy of "Yes to coca, but no to cocaine." In spite of rocky diplomatic relations, Bolivia has continued to cooperate with the Narcotics Affairs Section of the US embassy. Bolivian police have confiscated more cocaine under the Morales administration than any previous government. The government has also worked to limit coca production to small family plots per family intended for legal uses. This policy has not worked perfectly, but it has reduced conflict, and Bolivia produces less cocaine than either Peru or Colombia, countries who are major allies of the United States in the region.

Evo Morales' first landslide election victory in 2005 shocked Bolivia's upper classes. Many of them did not believe that an Aymara Indian who never had a chance to finish high school should be allowed to govern the country. The right wing began engaging a blockade of the parliamentary process and threatening secession of lowland departments where they still held control of regional governments.

At the height of the conflict in October 2008, US Ambassador Phillip Goldberg met publicly with the conservative Prefect of Santa Cruz Ruben Costas. Many Bolivians interpreted the meeting as a show of support for the right wing elites, just before allies of Costas launched attacks on indigenous people and burned government buildings. A few days later the Bolivian government accused Goldberg of supporting a coup attempt and expelled him. Unsurprisingly the United States retaliated in kind by expelling Bolivia's ambassador. A short time later, Morales also expelled United States Drug Enforcement Administration police, stating that some were being used in espionage actions to support the right wing coup effort.

In spite of the diplomatic spat, Bolivia has continued to cooperate with the US Embassy's Narcotics Affairs Section, which had a much larger presence in Bolivia than the DEA. But the United States government has been reluctant to patch things up and has continued retaliatory measures. First the Bush administration withdrew the Peace Corps, and then trade preferences were cancelled costing jobs to thousands of poor Bolivian who worked in the textile industry.

The election of Barack Obama brought great hope for a better relationship, but after one year, little has changed. The Obama administration and the Democrats, citing erroneous data on the drug war, have twice refused to restore trade preferences which were unjustly removed and they have refused to acknowledge the ways in which Bolivia has been cooperating with counter-narcotics efforts.
Meanwhile, support for the right wing in Bolivia has diminished and Evo Morales has grown more popular. His policies have recognized the dignity of poor indigenous Bolivians and provided economic stimulus by redistributing natural gas income. This resulted in the poorest nation in South America showing the best economic growth in the hemisphere during a global recession.

Morales has played a key role in ushering in a new era of democracy where the majority of poor and indigenous Bolivians are able to choose a candidate who they identify with and who is attempting to address their situation. Bolivia is still a long way from solving its many problems, but the United Sates needs to recognize that a genuinely democratic process of change is underway in Bolivia. The United States' old approach to the drug war and economic development policies has been counter-productive and it's time to allow Bolivia to try its own ideas. As Evo Morales begins his second term in office on January 22, the United States should move forward to reach agreement with Bolivia on respectful relations, transparent aid, and a new exchange of ambassadors.

Doug Hertzler is Associate Professor of Anthropology at Eastern Mennonite University. He has conducted periodic research in Bolivia, spending a total of six years in that country since 1988.
"You never change things by fighting the existing reality. To change something, build a new model that makes the existing model obsolete.”
Buckminster Fuller
Reply
#2
Hahahahaha....

Seems Dough Hertzel's research is newspaper research. Otherwise, he should know that:

- "Yes coca, no cocaine" was not Morale's policy, but a former bolivian president Jaime Paz Zamora, from the MIR party. The party no longer exist and many of his fellow leaders are chased by Morale´s government now.

- "Upper classes who have control over the country's print ant television media"...Hahaha. Evo Morales and his allies control more than 60 % of radios in the country (he has opened about 85 radio stations covering the total of bolivian territory. For a private company, is barely imposible to obtain permissions to install new radio station or obtain authorisation for bandwith); he (or his allieds, including venezuelan "investors" (Chavez) has buyed many newspapers (spacially in La Paz and Cochabamba, where the most important newspapers belongs to MAS or his allieds), not to mention state-owned Canal 7 large network, Megavision, Gigavision, News agencies like ABI, Bolpress, etc, etc... In fact, the contrary is the truth: Only few tv networks and newspapers remains in private hands, afraid and scared by judiciary actions or economic attacs that Morales threatens against them when they dare to critizise him.

- Coca leafs chewing is legal, but not harmless. :hahaha:Its not like tea or waffers. When the coca leaf is chewed, is mixed in the mouth with Bicarbonato de soda, a substance used in bakery, but with the saliva has the property to release the alcaloid of the leafs. They are swallowing cocaine. That's why, if you make a medical test to any coca chewer, results will be high levels of drugs. Many footbol players had problems with that, when they had played international games and a dopping test was performed.

- The Morales community was a war zone not because they where chasing him, but because 80% of bolivian cocaine production come from the communities he controls.

- The "Narcotics Affair Section" of the USA is not larger than DEA. :hahaha:In fact, they are only a couple of guys with computers whose only work is to aware bolivian police about the entrance of well-known colombian or peruvian Traffikkers, and to recive information about bolivian traffikkers to his data bank. They have no way to confirm, and no operational capabilities.

- Bolivian police has confiscated more cocaine... because THERE IS MUCH MORE cocaine to confiscate. Coca crops are almost evrywhere in Bolivia now, even in the jungle region of Pando.

-As I have explained before, Morales expelled DEA because the brothers of his former lover where caught by DEA traffikking more than a hundred kilos of cocaine. Vendetta. They are free now.

- No rigth wing coup effort has been performed, because no coup can succeed in Bolivia without the support of neighbors like Argentina or Brazil, who are allieds of Morales. USA doesen't care. They priorize their good relations with Brazil or Argentina. Right wing knows that. They don't fight to lose.

The "attempt" of a coup by Rosza Flores was a creation of Morales (he bring him to Bolivia, he pays him and latter, he kill him) to blame oppositors and chase them. Result: All oppositor leaders are chased by Morales police and accused judicially not matter if they are innocent or gilty (if they are innocent, he "creates" the gilty). There is no oppositor leader in Bolivia now.

-Bolivia showing "the best economic grouth" ...hahahaha. Another proof he doesen't know what he is talking about. Why then we have so much unemployment ...???... Why bolivians keep migrating to other counties...?, ho, dear.....

- Doh, I get tired to write about Morales marvels. Like his 2d. time coronation in a Hollywood performance all for your benefit, dear gringos. He know you love the movies, so he made his coronation accordingly (doesen't matter if historically was a joke).

-Old romans say that to keep the people happy, you only need bread and circus. We shurely have our circus.
Reply


Possibly Related Threads…
Thread Author Replies Views Last Post
  Can Washington overthrow three governments at the same time? by Thierry Meyssan Paul Rigby 6 8,175 15-02-2015, 11:24 AM
Last Post: Magda Hassan
  Lebanon: How Hizballah's Technology Undoes the CIA - TIME Bernice Moore 1 3,064 01-12-2011, 06:40 PM
Last Post: Danny Jarman
  Bolivia lowers retirement age Magda Hassan 2 3,376 06-12-2010, 09:23 PM
Last Post: Ed Jewett
  Bolivia's Coca-Colla Keith Millea 2 4,620 23-07-2010, 04:51 AM
Last Post: Magda Hassan
  Bolivia,A Beacon of Hope Keith Millea 6 6,476 02-05-2010, 07:15 AM
Last Post: Magda Hassan
  Fascist war against the people of Bolivia Magda Hassan 1 4,216 08-09-2009, 03:00 PM
Last Post: Ed Jewett
  The Destabilization of Bolivia and the "Kosovo Option" (Chossudovsky) Jan Klimkowski 1 10,200 05-10-2008, 09:34 AM
Last Post: Paul Rigby

Forum Jump:


Users browsing this thread: 1 Guest(s)