By Nick Estes
November 14, 2019 "Information
Clearing House" -
Evo Morales is more than
Bolivia’s first indigenous president — he is our
president, too. The rise of a humble Aymara coca
farmer to the nation’s highest office in 2006 marked
the arrival of indigenous people as vanguards of
history. Within the social movements that brought
him to power emerged indigenous visions of socialism
and the values of Pachamama (the Andean Earth
Mother). Evo represents five centuries of indigenous
deprivation and struggle in the hemisphere.
A coup against Evo, therefore, is a coup against
indigenous people.
Evo’s critics, from the anti-state left and
right, are quick to point out his failures. But it
was his victories that fomented this most recent
violent backlash.
Evo and his party, the indigenous-led Movement
for Socialism (MAS in Spanish), nationalized key
industries and used bold social spending to shrink
extreme poverty by more than half, lowering the
country’s Gini coefficient, which measures income
inequality, by a remarkable
19%. During Evo’s and MAS’s tenure, much of
Bolivia’s indigenous-majority population has, for
the first time in their lives, lived above poverty.
The achievements were more than economic.
Bolivia made a great leap forward in indigenous
rights.
Once at the margins of society, Indigenous
languages and culture have been thoroughly
incorporated into Bolivia’s plurinational model. The
indigenous Andean concept of Bien Vivir, which
promotes living in harmony with one another and the
natural world, was written into the country’s
constitution becoming a measure for institutional
reform and social progress. The Wiphala, an
indigenous multicolor flag, became a national flag
next to the tricolor, and 36 indigenous languages
became official national languages alongside
Spanish.
Evo’s indigenous socialism has become the
standard bearer for the international indigenous
community. The esteemed Maori jurist, Moana Jackson,
once referred to Bolivia’s 2009 constitution as the
“nearest thing in the world to a constitution that
has come from an Indigenous kaupapa (a communal
vision).”
The indigenous-socialist project accomplished
what neoliberalism has repeatedly failed to do:
redistribute wealth to society’s poorest sectors and
uplift those most marginalized. Under Evo and MAS
leadership, Bolivia liberated itself as a resource
colony. Before the coup, Evo attempted to
nationalize its large lithium reserves, an element
necessary for electric cars. Since the coup, Tesla’s
stocks have skyrocketed. Bolivia rebuked imperialist
states like the United States and Canada by taking
the path of resource nationalism to redistribute
profits across society.
This was Evo’s crime.
“My sin was being indigenous, leftist, and
anti-imperialist,” Evo
said after being coerced into resigning this
week.
Are You Tired Of
The Lies And
Non-Stop Propaganda?
|
His replacement, Jeanine Añez Chávez,
agreed. “I dream of a Bolivia free of
satanic indigenous rites,” the
opposition senator tweeted in 2013, “the
city is not for the Indians who should
stay in the highlands or the Chaco!!!”
After Evo’s departure, Chavez declared
herself interim president while holding
up a large bible, though she failed to
get the required quorum in the senate to
do so.
Next to her stood Luis Fernando Camacho, a member
of the Christian far-right. After Evo’s resignation,
Camacho stormed the presidential palace, a flag in
one hand and a bible in the other. “The bible is
returning to the government palace,” a pastor said
on a video while standing next to Camacho.
“Pachamama will never return. Today Christ is
returning to the Government Palace. Bolivia is for
Christ.”
In places where the opposition is strongest,
Wiphala flags, symbols of indigenous pride, were
lowered and burned. Police officers cut the flags
from their uniforms. What were symbolic acts quickly
escalated into street-level violence.
MAS members’ houses were burned. Evo’s home was
ransacked. Masked armed men began rounding up
suspected MAS supporters and indigenous people in
the streets, loading them into the back of trucks. A
handful of protesters have been killed. The same
social movements that ushered Evo and MAS into power
have taken to the streets to defend the gains of
their indigenous revolution.
Amidst the chaos, anti-indigenous race-hatred has
gripped the country since Evo’s October 20
re-election. While left critics continue to rail
against Evo, paradoxically blaming him for the coup
that overthrew him, no evidence has emerged of
election fraud. The Organization of American States
cited “irregularities” without yet providing
documentation. A
report by the Center for Economic and Policy
Research, however, found no irregularities and no
fraud.
To appease critics, Evo even agreed to
re-elections but was forced to resign under orders
from the military and escalating rightwing violence.
No one resigns with a gun pointed to their head.
Clearly, it was a coup.
Fearing assassination, Evo fled to Mexico where
he was granted asylum and greeted by a cheering
crowd.
The future of Bolivia is currently marching in
the streets, the millions of people who voted for
Evo in the last elections, the 47% whose voices and
votes were stolen by the violent return of the old,
colonial oligarchy.
Other critics still contend that Evo’s 13-year
tenure was too long. They mention Evo losing a
referendum to amend constitution but failing to note
the Supreme Court ruling that allowed him legally to
run for another term. For our indigenous president,
after five centuries of colonization, 13 years was
not long enough.
“We will come back,” Evo recently assured
supporters, quoting the 18th-century indigenous
resistance leader, “and we will be millions as Tupac
(Katari) said.”
This article was originally published by "The
Guardian" - -
Do you agree or disagree? Post
your comment here
==See Also==
At Least 12 Killed Following Coup in Bolivia
Russia Recognizes
Bolivia’s Interim Leader
:
Events leading to Bolivian president
Evo Morales leaving office had all the features of a
coup d'etat, Russia’s deputy foreign minister has
said. Moscow will be working with interim president
Jeanine Anez until the election.
Bolivia: Interim
president bars Morales from new elections:
Jeanine Anez has said that recently ousted president
Evo Morales has no right to run in any upcoming
national vote.
Bolivia interim leader
recognises Guaido as legitimate Venezuelan leader
At least six of the
key Bolivia coup plotters are alumni of the infamous
School of the Americas.:
Top Bolivian coup plotters trained by US
military’s School of the Americas, served as
attachés in FBI police programs
Behind the Propaganda: The Racist Coup in
Bolivia
Note To ICH Community
We ask that you assist us in
dissemination of the article published by
ICH to your social media accounts and post
links to the article from other websites.
Thank you for your support.
Peace and joy