By Andre Vltchek
November 16, 2019 "Information
Clearing House" -
They pledged to do it, and
they did – Bolivian feudal lords, mass media
magnates and other treasonous “elites” – they
overthrew the government, broke hope and interrupted
an extremely successful socialist process in what
was once one of the poorest countries in South
America.
One day, they will be cursed
by their own nation. One day they will stand trial
for sedition. One day, they will have to reveal who
trained them, who employed them, who turned them
into spineless beasts. One day! Hopefully soon.
But now, Evo Morales,
legitimate President of Bolivia, elected again and
again by his people, is leaving his beloved country.
He is crossing the Andes, flying far, to fraternal
Mexico, which extended her beautiful hand, and
offered him political asylum.
This is now. The striking
streets of La Paz are covered by smoke, full of
soldiers, stained with blood. People are
disappearing. They are being detained, beaten, and
tortured. Photos of indigenous men and women,
kneeling, facing walls, hands tied behind their
backs, are beginning to circulate on social
media.
El Alto, until recently a
place of hope, with its playgrounds for children and
elegant cable cars connecting the once dirt-poor
communities, is now beginning to lose its native
sons and daughters. Battles are raging. People are
charging against the oppressors, carrying flags,
dying.
A civil war, or more
precisely, a war for the survival of socialism, a
war against imperialism, for social justice, for
indigenous people. A war against racism. A war for
Bolivia, for its tremendous pre-colonial culture,
for life; life as it is being perceived in
the Andes, or deep in the South American rainforest,
not as it is seen in Paris, Washington or Madrid.
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The legacy of Evo Morales is
tangible, and simple to understand.
During almost 14 years in
power, all the social indicators of Bolivia went
sky-high. Millions were pulled out of poverty.
Millions have been benefiting from free medical
care, free education, subsidized housing, improved
infrastructure, a relatively high minimum wage, but
also, from pride that was given back to the
indigenous population, which forms the majority in
this historically feudal country governed by
corrupt, ruthless ‘elites’ – descendants of Spanish
conquistadors and European ‘gold-diggers’.
Evo Morales made the Aymara
and Quechua languages official, on par with Spanish.
He made people who communicate in these languages,
equal to those who use the tongue of the conquerors.
He elevated the great indigenous culture high, to
where it belongs – making it the symbol of Bolivia,
and of the entire region.
Gone was the Christian
cross-kissing (look at the crosses reappearing
again, all around the oh so European-looking Jeanine
Añez who has grabbed power, ‘temporarily’ but still
thoroughly illegally). Instead, Evo used to travel,
at least once a year, to Tiwanaku, “the
capital of the powerful pre-Hispanic empire that
dominated a large area of the southern Andes and
beyond, reached its apogee between 500 and 900 AD”,
according to UNESCO. That is where he used to search
for spiritual peace. That is where his identity came
from.
Gone was the veneration of
the Western colonialist and imperialist culture, of
savage capitalism.
This was a new world, with
ancient, deep roots. This is where South America has
been regrouping. Here, and in Correa’s Ecuador,
before Correa and his beliefs were purged and ousted
by the treacherous Moreno.
And what is more: before the
coup, Bolivia was not suffering from economic
downfall; it was doing well, extremely well. It was
growing, stable, reliable, confident.
Even the owners of big
Bolivian companies, if they were to care one bit for
Bolivia and its people, had countless reasons to
rejoice.
But the Bolivian business
community, as in so many other Latin American
countries, is obsessed with the one and only
‘indicator’: “how much higher, how much above the
average citizens it can get”. This is the old
mentality of the colonialists; a feudal, fascist
mentality.
Years ago, I was invited, in
La Paz, for dinner by an old family of senators and
mass media owners. With no shame, no fear, openly,
they spoke, despite knowing who I was:
“We will get rid of this
Indigenous bastard. Who does he think he is? If we
lose millions of dollars in the process, as we did
in 1973 Chile and now in Venezuela, we will still do
it. Restoring our order is the priority.”
There is absolutely no way to
reason with these people. They cannot be appeased,
only crushed; defeated. In Venezuela, Brazil, Chile,
Ecuador or in Bolivia. They are like rats, like
disease, proverbial symbols of fascism as in the
novel The Plague, written by Albert Camus.
They can hide, but they never fully disappear. They
are always ready to invade, with zero notice, some
happy city.
They are always ready to join
forces with the West, because their roots are in the
West. They think precisely like the European
conquerors, like North American imperialists. They
have double nationalities and homes scattered all
over the world. Latin America for them is just a
place to live, and to plunder natural resources,
exploit labor. They rob here, and spend money
elsewhere; educate their children elsewhere, get
their surgeries done (plastic and real) elsewhere.
They go to opera houses in Paris but never mingle
with indigenous people at home. Even if, by some
miracle, they join the Left, it is the Western,
anarcho-syndicalist Left of North America and
Europe, never the real, anti-imperialist,
revolutionary Left of non-European countries.
They don’t need the success
of the nation. They don’t want a great, prosperous
Bolivia; Bolivia for all of its citizens.
They only want prosperous
corporations. They want money, profit; for
themselves, for their families and clans, for their
bandit group of people. They want to be revered,
considered ‘exceptional’, superior. They cannot live
without that gap – the great gap between them and
those ‘dirty Indians’, as they call the indigenous
people, when no one hears them!
And that is why, Bolivia
should fight, defend itself, as it is beginning to
do so right now.
If this, what is happening to
Evo and his government, is “the end”, then Bolivia
will be set back by decades. Entire generations will
again rot alive, in desperation, in rural shacks
made of clay, without water and electricity, and
without hope.
The ‘elites’ are now talking
about ‘peace’, peace for whom? For them! Peace, as
it was before Evo; ‘peace’ so the rich can play golf
and fly for shopping to their beloved Miami and
Madrid, while 90% of the population was getting
kicked, humiliated, insulted. I remember that
‘peace’. The Bolivian people remember it even
better.
I covered the civil war in
neighboring Peru, for several years, in the 90’s,
and I often crossed over into Bolivia. I wrote an
entire novel about it – “Point
of No Return”. It was an absolute horror. I
could not even take my local photographers to a
concert or for a cup of coffee in a decent place,
because they were cholos, indigenous.
Nobodies in their own countries. It was apartheid.
And if socialism does not return, it will be
apartheid once again.
Last time I went to Bolivia,
few months ago, it was totally different country.
Free, confident. Stunning.
Remembering what I saw in
Bolivia and Peru, quarter of a century ago, I
declare, clearly and decisively: “To hell with such
‘peace’, proposed by elites’”!
None of this is, of course,
mentioned in Western mass media outlets. I am
monitoring them, from the New York Times to Reuters.
In the US, UK, even France. Their eyes are shining.
They cannot hide their excitement; euphoria.
The same NYT celebrated the
massacres during the 1965-66 US-orchestrated
military coup in Indonesia, or on 9-11-1973 in
Chile.
Now Bolivia, predictably. Big
smiles all over the West. Again, and again, ‘the
findings’ of the OAS (Organization of American
States) are being quoted as if they were facts; ‘the
findings’ of an organization which is fully
subservient to Western interests, particularly those
of Washington.
It is as if by saying: “We
have proof that a coup did not take place, because
those who had organized the coup say that it
actually did not happen.”
In Paris, on the 10th
November, in the middle of the Place de la
Republique, a huge crowd of treasonous Bolivians
gathered, demanding the resignation of Evo. I filmed
and photographed these people. I wanted to have this
footage in my possession, for posterity.
They live in France, and
their allegiances are towards the West. Some are
even of European stock, although others are
indigenous.
There are millions of Cubans,
Venezuelans, Brazilians, living in the US and
Europe, working tirelessly for the destruction of
their former motherlands. They do it in order to
please their new masters, to make profit, as well as
various other reasons.
It is not peace. This is
terrible, brutal war, which has already taken
millions of lives, in Latin America alone.
This continent has the most
unequally distributed wealth on earth. Hundreds of
millions are living in misery. While others, sons
and daughters or Bolivian feudal scum, are attending
Sorbonne and Cambridge, to get intellectually
conditioned, in order to serve the West.
Each time, and I repeat
each time, a decent, honest government is voted
in, democratically, by the people, each time there
is someone who has invented a brilliant solution and
solid plan to improve this dire situation, the clock
begins ticking. The years, (sometimes even months)
of the leader are numbered. He or she will either be
killed, or ousted, or humiliated and forced out of
power.
The country then goes back
to, literally, shit, as has happened just recently
to Ecuador (under Moreno), Argentina (under Macri)
and Brazil (under Bolsonaro). The brutal status
quo is preserved. The lives of tens of millions
are ruined. “Peace” returns. For the Western regime
and its lackeys.
Then, as a raped country
screams in pain, countless international NGO’s, UN
agencies and funding organizations, descend upon it,
suddenly determined to ‘help refugees’, to keep
children in classrooms, to ‘empower women’, or to
fight malnutrition and hunger.
None of this would be needed,
if the elected governments which are serving their
people were to be left alone; left in real peace!
All this sick, pathetic
hypocrisy is never discussed, publicly, by the mass
media. All this Western terrorism unleashed against
progressive Latin American countries (and dozens of
other countries, all over the world), is hushed up.
Enough is enough!
Latin America is, once again,
waking up. The people are outraged. The coup in
Bolivia will be resisted. Macri’s regime has fallen.
Mexico is marching in a cautiously socialist
direction. Chile wants its socialist country back; a
country which was crushed by military boots in 1973.
In the name of the people, in
the name of the great indigenous culture, and in the
name of the entire continent, Bolivian citizens are
now resisting, struggling, confronting the fascist,
pro-Western forces.
Revolutionary language is
once again being used. It may be out of fashion in
Paris or London, but not in South America. And that
is what matters – here!
Evo did not lose. He won. His
country has won. Under his leadership, it became a
wonderful country; a country full of hope, a country
that offered great prospects to hundreds of millions
all over La Patria Grande. Everyone south of
the Rio Grande knows it. Marvelous Mexico, which has
given him asylum, knows it, too.
Evo has won. And then, he was
forced out by the treasonous military, by treasonous
business thugs, feudal land owners, and by
Washington. Evo and his family and comrades have
been brutalized by that extreme right-wing
paramilitary leader – Luis Fernando Camacho – who is
calling himself a Christian; brutalized by him and
by his men and women.
Bolivia will fight. It will
bring back its legitimate President where he
belongs; to the Presidential Palace.
The plane which is taking Evo
to Mexico, north, is actually taking him home, back
to Bolivia. It is a big, big detour. Thousands of
kilometers, and months, perhaps even years… But from
the moment the airplane took off, the tremendous,
epic journey back to La Paz began.
The people of Bolivia will
never abandon their President. And Evo is, forever,
tied to his People. And Long Live Bolivia, Damn
It!
Andre
Vltchek is a philosopher, novelist, filmmaker and
investigative journalist. He has covered wars and
conflicts in dozens of countries. Three of his
latest books are
Revolutionary Optimism, Western Nihilism, a
revolutionary novel “Aurora” and
a bestselling work of political non-fiction: “Exposing
Lies Of The Empire”.
View his other books here.
Watch Rwanda
Gambit,
his groundbreaking documentary about Rwanda and
DRCongo and his film/dialogue with Noam Chomsky “On
Western Terrorism”.
Vltchek presently resides in East Asia and the
Middle East, and continues to work around the world.
He can be reached through his website and
his Twitter.
He writes especially
for the online magazine “New
Eastern Outlook.”
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