What’s
next for Bolivia after military coup?
Morales was the glue that held everything
together
By Reese Erlich
December
02, 2019 "Information
Clearing House"
- In 2005, I sat in a lounge off
the Senate chamber in La Paz, Bolivia, waiting
for an interview. I was wearing my best coat and
tie. With my thinning hair and grey mustache, I
could pass for a Bolivian of European descent.
In fact, numerous people smiled and said “buenos
días,” as if I was a familiar face.
The
senators were mostly white men, reflecting the
makeup of Bolivia’s political elite at that
time. But that changed just a few months later
with the election of Evo Morales and his party,
Movement Toward Socialism (MAS).
Morales’s government
nationalized
natural gas and electric companies, defying both
the US and the Bolivian oligarchy. So it’s not
surprising that those forces now denounce
Morales as a dictator and cheer his overthrow.
Bolivia
held elections on October 20 this year.
Opposition leaders, claiming vote fraud,
organized mass, anti-government demonstrations.
Sectors of the military and police sided with
the opposition. Morales, his vice president and
other top government leaders resigned under
military pressure. Some went into exile in
Mexico.
While
the Trump Administration and mainstream media
characterized the events as a popular uprising,
Senator Bernie Sanders, Independent of Vermont,
correctly called it a coup.
“It was
the military who intervened in that process and
asked him to leave,” Sanders
said
during the Democratic Party debate in Atlanta on
November 20. “When the military intervenes, in
my view, that’s called a coup.”
Are You Tired Of
The Lies And
Non-Stop Propaganda?
|
Some recent history
In
2005, I reported from Bolivia on the popular
movements opposed to then President Carlos Mesa.
The rich elite who ran Bolivia in those days
followed US-inspired neoliberal economic
policies by privatizing government-owned
companies, even those providing drinking water
and sewage lines.
The
privatized water utility was owned by a French
multinational corporation. It raised the sewage
hook-up charge to $450, roughly eight times the
typical monthly income in El Alto, a
working-class city located above La Paz.
The
people of El Alto sought Mesa’s resignation
through mass protests. “We used force because
this is an issue facing us and our children,”
street vendor Alejandra Arteaga told me when I
was writing for the
Dallas Morning News.
“When there was a strike or a blockade, we went
up to participate.”
In June
2005, a new round of mass demonstrations forced
Mesa to resign, and by December, Bolivians
elected Morales president. He served three
terms.
Poverty alleviation and indigenous
rights
At a
time when most Latin American economies were
slowing, Bolivia under Morales and MAS reduced
poverty by 42 percent and extreme poverty by 60
percent, according to a
study
by the Center for Economic and Policy Research (CEPR).
In 2008, unemployment was cut in half, from 7.7
to 4.4 percent.
MAS
made these advances because Bolivia defied
conventional US economic prescriptions,
according to Guillaume Long, a senior policy
analyst at CEPR. “MAS opposed the neoliberal
agenda and nationalized resources such as gas,”
he told me in a phone interview.
The
country’s indigenous groups, including Aymara
and Quechua, saw significant gains under the MAS
government, according to Bret Gustafson, an
anthropology professor and Bolivia expert at the
Washington University in St. Louis.
“The
government passed anti-racism legislation,” he
said in a phone interview. “Indigenous people
were included in the highest level of the
government and military. Indigenous languages
and culture were celebrated under Evo.”
But
those gains are in serious danger if the right
wing stays in power.
Controversy: Morales runs again
Under
Bolivia’s constitution, a newly elected
president may serve two terms. In 2016, by a
narrow margin, Bolivians voted down a
referendum that
would have eliminated presidential term limits.
But in 2017, Bolivia’s Constitutional Court
ruled
that term limits were in violation of the OAS
treaty on human rights, clearing the way for
Morales to run again.
The
conservative opposition angrily denounced the
ruling, saying the court was packed with Morales
supporters. But Gustafson says even some liberal
and leftist Bolivians have a “deep memory of
past dictatorial governments.” Moreover, Morales
had not groomed a successor who could maintain
party unity. “Morales was the glue that held
everything together,” Gustafson says.
In the
October 20 election, a dozen candidates vied for
the presidency, including former President
Carlos Mesa and Evo Morales. Under Bolivian law,
a candidate can win by gaining just 40 percent
of the vote if it is 10 percent more than the
second-place opponent. After the final count,
Morales won with 47 percent compared to Mesa’s
36.5 percent. MAS also won a majority in both
legislatures.
The
Organization of American States and the Trump
Administration immediately
alleged
vote fraud. They claimed the vote count was
halted when it seemed Morales would be forced
into a runoff and then suspiciously re-opened
with a Morales victory.
As
explained in an exhaustive
election analysis
by CEPR, the official vote count never stopped.
The unofficial “quick count” did stop, as
planned beforehand, after tabulating 83 percent
of the votes. The official count, which is the
only binding result, continued uninterrupted
until officials announced the results.
The
last votes to be tabulated, which the OAS claims
were suspiciously favorable to Morales, were in
fact consistent with votes from areas
traditionally supportive of MAS.
From
both the quick count and final count, “You could
easily determine that Morales won,” says CEPR’s
Long, who was also an OAS observer in the 2017
Bolivian elections.
In
short, there was no voter fraud that propelled
Morales into power. But the misinformation,
along with genuine anger from those opposed to
Morales running at all, led to large
demonstrations.
The US role
Bolivia
is a major source of natural gas and minerals
such as lithium, making it of great importance
to multinational corporations. The US in the
past
supported
military coups in Bolivia when civilian
governments didn’t follow pro-Washington
policies.
The US
has a long history of training Bolivian police
and military leaders. One of the leaders of the
recent coup
attended a course
at the Western Hemisphere Institute for Security
Cooperation (formerly known as the School of the
Americas) at Fort Benning, Georgia.
For
many years, USAID has
funded projects
to promote
businesses in conservative, eastern Bolivia,
pitting them against the movements of workers
and peasant farmers.
Washington has the means and the will to
instigate a coup in Bolivia. In the months and
years ahead, more information will emerge
revealing the extent of direct US involvement.
But there’s no doubt the coup serves US
interests and has full US support.
What lies ahead?
After
the military forced Morales and other leaders to
leave Bolivia, Senator Jeanine Añez, a little
known ultra-right winger, declared herself
president based on her position as second vice
president of the Senate. Her initial cabinet had
only one indigenous member and reporters quickly
discovered
racist tweets
in her Twitter account.
Widespread looting broke out. MAS supporters
mobilized against the coup, blockading highways
leading to many cities. On November 20, six
indigenous men were shot and
killed in El
Alto, in an act that protesters attributed to
the military. To date
more than thirty people have died
and dozens have been injured.
In late
November,
demonstrations were halted
in some MAS strongholds but continued in others
as protestors demanded release of demonstrators
arrested in previous protests. On November 24,
MAS legislative leaders and Añez agreed to
legislation calling for new presidential and
legislative elections in April 2020, while
prohibiting Morales from running.
From
his exile in Mexico, Morales reluctantly agreed
with the compromise. “In the name of peace,
sacrifices have to be made and I am sacrificing
my candidacy even though I have every right to
it,” he
told
The Guardian.
“It was
a practical recognition of the balance of
power,” Gustafson says. “Evo still has
widespread support. But any effort to bring him
back would galvanize rightwingers, some military
officers, and some moderates.”
Bolivia
remains deeply divided. The right wing is split
among several factions. While Morales can’t run,
MAS will field another candidate for president
in April, along with veteran legislators from
both houses.
“Morales has a lot of personal appeal, but MAS
also has popular support,” says analyst Long.
“MAS remains a force to be reckoned with.
Reese Erlich’s nationally distributed column,
Foreign Correspondent, appears every two weeks
in 48 Hills. Follow him on
Twitter,
@ReeseErlich;
friend him on
Facebook; and
visit his
webpage.
Do you agree or disagree?
Post your comment here