COHA: No Smooth Sailing for Bolivia’s Morales
Council On Hemispheric
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MONITORING POLITICAL, ECONOMIC AND
DIPLOMATIC
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Friday, February 23rd, 2007
Press
Releases, Bolivia, Front Page
No Smooth Sailing for Bolivia’s Morales
• A good man attempts to cope with a superabundance of problems within a completely democratic orbit
• Too much drift within Morales’ rule
• Autonomy fight now moves to the Constituent Assembly
• Cochabamba’s obduracy could be replicated throughout much of eastern part of the country
• Bolivia’s international role wilts as the good-natured government’s problems mount
• Opposition’s complaints are mainly spurious
As Bolivia’s President Evo Morales celebrated his first anniversary in office on January 22, mounting tensions in the city of Cochabamba led to violent confrontations between two groups—government supporters and those opposed to his authority. The anti-Morales forces rallied in support of former opposition presidential candidate and Cochabamba governor Manfred Reyes Villa. As a result, two were killed and 150 wounded in the strife stemming from seemingly irreconcilable divisions between wealthy anti-government elites and Bolivia’s poor and indigenous following who overwhelmingly back Morales.
Villa sparked the Cochabamba protests with his announcement that he would work to overturn the July 2006 election results in which Bolivian voters rejected the autonomy referendum which would have decentralized four of Bolivia’s nine districts. While the wealthier and more European-like districts in the east pushed for greater self-rule from the central government, Morales fought back by instituting an agrarian reform program in favor of the poor and the indigenous, which would redistribute land that previously was held by the country’s elite. In taking this action, the Morales administration will now have to expect a growing challenge that could eliminate what remains of the good will between the two sides, leaving the onset of a genuine class struggle likely to plague Bolivia for months, if not years to come.
Class Conflict
Tensions between supporters
of Morales’ Movimiento al Socialismo (MAS) and a
fractious opposition have existed since his inauguration.
After triumphing in the December 2005 presidential
elections, Morales defended coca farmers’ rights and
flaunted his status as Bolivia’s first indigenous
president. At the same time, he thrust hydrocarbon
nationalization and land redistribution programs into the
spotlight of his socialist movement, as well as toyed with
the advanced design of the nation’s new constitution. The
new organic document, at last being worked upon by the
constituent assembly, will include the revival of the
previous 1996 Agrarian Reform Law that was never enacted.
This law was intended to redistribute land not presently
serving a social or economic function to the poor. On March
6, 2006, the Bolivian Congress approved legislation to
create an assembly to draft a new constitution that would
include
Morales’ agrarian reform
measures
Although the guidelines for change were
ambiguous, elections in July 2006 allowed voters to directly
select candidates for the Constituent Assembly, with 255
members having approximately one year from the following
August, to rewrite the constitution. However, due to the
Assembly’s attempt at creating a diversified and
representative body that would guarantee seats to minority
parties, the necessary two-thirds’ ratification formula
for achieving the new constitution consequentially became
all but impossible to achieve. Podemos, the
country’s leading opposition group holds 24 percent of the
seats, while other minority parties have 3 percent or less,
and the ruling MAS dominates with 54 percent. With no
political party controlling a two-thirds majority of the
seats, the drafting process up to now has been frustrated
with scant forward motion being registered.
A democratic and representative constitution protecting the rights of Bolivia’s geographically, ethnically and economically diverse population is crucial to the country’s cohesion. This is especially true in relation to the nation’s historically under-represented indigenous communities that normally make up about 62 percent of the total population of Bolivia. Already a few months into what has turned out to be an unusually arduous process, opposition in the Assembly, particularly to specific constitutional changes is more ferocious than anticipated. Not only is there a crippling lack of consensus being demonstrated there, but (as was quickly seen) fierce street fighting eventually materialize between Cochabamba’s poor and indigenous and its euro-elites.
Civil Disobedience
Cochabamba was a
divided city on January 11 as coca farmers, many of them
members of a Morales-led coca growers union, and various
indigenous campesinos occupied the city’s colonial central
plaza in opposition to the eastern departments’ autonomy
demands. Morales loyalists demanded Governor Villa’s
resignation as they were surrounded by mainly middle-class
Villa supporters who had blocked off nearby streets. Villa,
accused of corruption and the theft of public property, has
become identified in the public’s mind as perhaps the most
outspoken critic of the central government. He is credited
with sparking the protests that began to mushroom in
Cochabamba after he announced that he would attempt to
repeal referendum results which rejected the idea of eastern
autonomy. Armed with rocks and sticks, the campesinos
marched around the departmental government building, and,
even after being gassed, managed to set the building’s
front doors ablaze. Calling themselves “Youths for
Democracy,” the ultra right-wing pro-autonomists resembled
paramilitary gangs as they beat protesting indigenous with
two-by-four planks after the crowds had been gassed by the
authorities. The ensuing violence reveals that Bolivia may
be rapidly moving towards a militarization of the class
conflict that could ignite a civil war between the
prosperous eastern and the impoverished western portions of
the country.
East vs. West
During the same July
2006 elections, Bolivians had voted on a departmental
autonomy referendum that was called for by the
secession-minded eastern provinces. The eastern lowland area
historically has been estranged from the western highlands
due to geopolitical, socioeconomic, and ethnic differences.
While the eastern region— profoundly influenced by the
presence of the nation’s oil and natural gas deposits, the
western provinces typically consist of a subsistent income
population. Currently, the constitution grants the
department minimal autonomous authority. The central
government fears that the four eastern departments are in
fact striving for independence, while a majority of the
nation has rejected increasing the country’s autonomy. The
terms of autonomy and the relative degree of
decentralization, (with negotiations being shrouded in
obscurity) are supposed to be spelled out in detail by the
Constituent Assembly. Yet, the inability to agree on the
technicalities of the voting procedure—specifically the
dispute over the two-thirds majority vote rule—has frozen
the process while pressure mounts from both the opposition
as well as pro-government forces to make some concessions to
resolve the problem.
The Slippery Slope
These
protests are budding beyond Cochabamba’s departmental
borders to other regions—more recently to La Paz— where
protestors demanded that Villa-backer Governor Jose Luis
Paredes resign. Ultimately, the demonstrations previously
held on January11 and 22 were unsuccessful in catapulting
the pro-Morales group Fejuve (Federación de Juntas
Vecinales) into ascendancy because they were unable to
force Paredes or Villa to step down from office. Despite the
failure of the pro-Morales militants, they have refused to
call off their efforts and continue to advocate street
action as the means to achieving the desired revolutionary
changes.
In the aftermath of the bitter protests in Cochabamba, it became clear that Morales was losing much of his original support among Bolivia’s middle class at the same time that his own constituency—largely composed of the indigenous and working-class— is becoming more radicalized. The middle-class’ deepening opposition to the government’s proclaimed socialist initiatives pose a significant challenge to the forward thrust of the left-leaning Pink Tide movement that connects Morales with such other political notables as Venezuela’s Hugo Chávez, Nicaragua’s Daniel Ortega, and Ecuadorian president Rafael Correa. The fundamentally class-based confrontation at Cochabamba was representative of the destructive socio-economic divisions that tenaciously prevail in South America’s poorest country, where 65 percent of the population lives below the poverty line. Indigenous representatives recognize that regional autonomy would further segregate the country, and with it, intensify their poverty. Their fight for unity in the face of eastern Bolivia’s drive for sovereignty, and perhaps later independence, is motivated by well-ingrained traditions of socioeconomic divides.
Civil War?
Although
there has been speculation that a civil war could develop
from the escalating tension in the country, some argue that
left-wing protestors must resort to more constitutional ways
to reform the political system in their favor if they wish
to achieve their goals. The coca farmers, who set up a
revolutionary committee on January 16 to replace Villa, had
hoped for the central government’s speedy credentialing of
its mission. Morales, however, denied them the sought-after
recognition and insisted that a dialogue be carried out
between the factions in order to more easily resolve the
issue. Morales’ inability to satisfy his supporters
through more effective ways of dealing with their extreme
demands demonstrates the challenges he must juggle in order
to maintain accord, please his constituents, and check the
opposition’s growing momentum in favor of eastern
autonomy.
Tug-O-War
For the time being,
prospects for a civil war have fizzled. Although Villa has
returned to Cochabamba where he will attempt to resume his
rule there, the sensitive class divisions are deeply
embedded in different parts of the country. As persistent
frictions have prevailed since Morales’ election, the
current congressional stalemate has created a grey area in
which refulgent rhetoric projects a false image of efficacy,
while in actuality, few tangible results beyond utter
confusion are to be seen. Cochabamba points to breaking
point for the traditional system’s growing irrelevance
that has been constantly communicated throughout Bolivia’s
modern era. Today, both sides are entrenched in positions
that don’t allow for easy compromise.
The president is
in a political bind. As he attempts to keep the indigenous
population reasonably content, he must also avoid simply
placating the opposition too egregiously, while he strives
to attract at least some of them to adopt his platform. At
the same time, and in order to prevent further street
unrest, Morales has proposed a recall referendum where
unpopular mayors and prefects—or even presidents—who
have not won at least 50 percent of the vote, will have to
be reelected by a popular vote in order to keep their seats.
Governor Villa will be the first official to have to submit
himself to a recall because of his 47.5 percent voters’
approval, whereas Morales’ 53 percent in the December 2005
elections exempts him from the process.
Two-Thirds
Morales’ inability to satisfy the
country’s indigenous communities is a prime example of the
current crisis that he has attempted to downplay by
announcing that it would never experience a civil war.
However, Morales’ tacit acknowledgment that the concept of
civil turmoil in his country cannot be ruled out is
admission enough that dangerous internal divisions exist in
the country and could erupt with devastating consequences.
The protracted incapacity of Bolivia’s Constituent
Assembly to reach an agreement on the necessary voting
procedures for rewriting the constitution showed that
Bolivia’s divisions go at least as deep as the oil beneath
its soil.
Victory at Last
The Constituent
Assembly finally achieved a two-thirds majority with its
‘article 70’ provision that was signed on February 6 by
MAS and the opposition group National Unity (UN). This
tentative settlement has enabled the drafting process to
begin anew after being on hold since the assembly’s
initiation last August. The deal has so far been the first
step towards actual progress in Morales’ otherwise
stagnant reform process. The slippery slope of political
dissent, however, is an issue that even a two-thirds vote
cannot resolve. Morales’ primary support is from the
indigenous activists and after their failures in Cochabamba
and La Paz, many of them believe that the president has not
gone far enough to meet their needs. The commission of the
Continental Indigenous Encounter expressed dissatisfaction
over the adequacy of indigenous representation in the
constitutional assembly, and demanded that a separate native
people’s legislative body be formed. They also argue that
the constitutional assembly represents political parties as
opposed to social movements, and therefore undermines the
integrity of Morales’ movimiento. The President’s
decision to deploy the nation’s armed forces to take
control of Bolivia’s oil and gas fields in Camiri, which
had previously been taken over by protestors demanding
proper renationalization of the energy industry, as decreed
on May 1, 2006, illuminates the problem of Morales’s
diminishing power over the radicals within his own support
base. Protestors blockading the main roads leading into
Argentina and Paraguay—through which 85 percent of the
country’s trade is transported — reveal that the
socialist movement possesses a limited thrust at this
time.
Crisis for Morales
With his popularity
at 59 percent, Morales still holds a relatively high level
of support in Bolivia. During his anniversary speech on
January 22, he reinforced his confidence in the current
regime by reminding Bolivians that “some thought [they]
would be a government without a future… [while] others
asked how a campesino could end up being
president.” Morales has promoted numerous achievements in
the first 12 months of his rule: reducing the salary of high
government officials, including cutting his own by 57
percent, reducing energy rates for the poor, raising
teachers’ and doctors’ salaries, instituting literacy
programs, bringing in thousands of Cuban volunteer doctors
to provide free medical care, and endeavoring to nationalize
the country’s natural gas resources are just a few of
them. Such successes are indicative of Morales’ pledge to
give the indigenous Bolivians a voice in their society that
they previously had lacked.
However, one must also question the long term prospects of his reforms and see the threats to them as illustrated by the recent combative but inconclusive protests against the government. The question still very much remains: Is Morales’ Movimiento al Socialismo really a bona fide 21st century movement like Chávez’s Bolivarian Revolution or does it have another, slower-moving agenda, which is ultimately influenced by U.S. desiderata? Despite his efforts to legalize the coca plant and make the product’s legal use available in various manufactured products, there is much to be done if this important goal is to be realized.
The central government
has yet to agree on its coca eradication objectives for
2007, fully nationalize its hydrocarbons, or negotiate the
control of many strategic multinationals now operating
within Bolivia. Vice-minister for coca and development Felix
Barra told the local press that as of January 31 the
president was considering a proposed reduction of 4,000
hectares in coca cultivation, yet he promised the
coca-growers union that he intended to increase the legal
plantings from 12,000 hectares to 20,000 hectares. These
contradictory commitments prompted one to wonder whether
Morales is yielding to U.S. drug-policy pressures to reduce
the existing 30,000 “illegal” hectares of coca
(according to U.S. estimates), or if he truly feels honor
bound to protect the cocaleros
rights.
Revolución Boliviana?
Winning
the presidential race on a campaign promise to reject
unwarranted U.S. exploitation in Bolivia along with his
pledge to revamp the constitution for it to display more
accountability, from Morales’ point of view, represent the
voiceless cocaleros, indigenous and poor, Morales has thus
far moved at a pace slow enough to create some doubts over
his resolve to serve the people who elected him. Although
Morales has been criticized for relying on the guidance
provided by his close relationships with Chávez and ailing
Cuban president Fidel Castro, his past year in office has
shown relatively little for it to compare with the past 12
months of Chávez’s rule. The relatively slow pace of
change now being witnessed in Bolivia might run counter to
the tempo of Venezuela’s blistering revolutionary-guided
agenda. Their difference in pace further helps differentiate
the two leftist leaders, yet it is difficult and almost a
misuse of time to compare the two left-wing leaders with
their dissimilar constituencies and the potential for
political polarization that is at least as volatile in
Bolivia as is the case with Venezuela.
Surpassing
Sectionalism
Bolivia has experienced both the forward
movements and setbacks that have affected the Morales
administrations this past year. That could have been
predicted. Throughout its history, Bolivia has experienced
turmoil that appeared to make it unmanageable. In spite of
recent upheavals, this Andean nation will most likely not
disintegrate as a result of sectionalism. Yet, it seems that
the eastern conservatives and the western indigenous could
very well perpetuate the country’s historical legacy of
unequal wealth, power and privilege, at least for a while. A
constitutional drafting process may prove to be an
irrefutable prerequisite to mend the political polarization
gripping the country and a necessary pre-condition to
instill trust among Bolivians. It is hopeful that Bolivian
delegates to the Assembly will supersede given political
affiliations and act in their nation’s best interest.
This
analysis was prepared by COHA Research Associate Nicki
Mokhtari
February 23rd, 2007
Word Count: 2700
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