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Bolivia:
Social Polarization Deepens
by Gerry Foley / April 2005 issue of Socialist Action
The precariously balanced bourgeois president of Bolivia, Carlos
Mesa, squeaked through another crisis on March 8 when he won a vote of
confidence in the parliament after threatening to resign. Mesa had argued
that the street and road blockades organized in protest of the sellout of
the countries resources to foreign corporations were making the country unmanageable.
In a March 8 feature article on the Bolivian situation, the Christian
Science Monitor had predicted that if Mesa won his wager with the congress
it would
be only a tactical victory: “Regardless of how Congress votes, the
forces that led to Mesa’s dramatic decision are making the country
increasingly difficult
to govern by any single individual or political party.
Bolivia is cleaving between the poorer, indigenous-dominated
highlands near La Paz and the more business-oriented eastern lowlands
centered in
the city of Santa Cruz.”
The racial divide was stressed by the British Independent (March 8):
“Rival protests yesterday in La Paz and El Alto, an Indian-dominated city
on the
outskirts of the capital, provided a snapshot of the divisions
between the urban middle class, mainly of European descent, and indigenous
Indians, who make up 70 percent of the population and for the most part live
in abject poverty. In El Alto, predominantly Aymara Indians blocked the
road to the capital; while
in La Paz hundreds gathered to show their support for Mr. Mesa and
urge him to stay on.”
The racist discourse of Mesa’s supporters was noted by correspondent
Hector Tobar in the March 13 Los Angeles Times: “’They’re like children
[the indigenous people],’ says Ernesto Rocabado, a 41-year-old psychologist
at a school in Calacoto, one of the city’s most affluent neighborhoods.
‘They only
understand discipline. It hurts me to say this, but it’s like in the
colonial times. What you really need to do is bring out the whip.’”
The crowds that hailed Mesa as he spoke from his balcony chanted,
“Una mano dura!” (“An iron hand!”) against the protesters. So far Mesa has
not tried to use force, because the attempts of his predecessor, Gonzalo
Sanchez de Lozada, in the fall of 2003 to suppress the protest movement by
violence touched off a mass explosion that reached the point of a general insurrection.
The army was beginning to break under the pressure of the masses.
Despite all his protestations that he cannot bear the thought of
blood, there is no doubt that Mesa will use whatever force he thinks is
necessary when he thinks he can. And the deepening polarization in the
country means that a decisive confrontation is on the way. The situation of
unresolved conflict in the country is infuriating the president’s
middle-class supporters and demoralizing the desperately poor majority of
the country.
Mesa’s main advantage remains what it was when Sanchez de Lozada
fell; no leadership of the mass movement has yet emerged that proposes an
alternative to the bourgeois parliament for running the country. The largest
opposition party, the Movimiento al Socialismo (sic) of Evo Morales is even
calling on Mesa to stay in office.
A March 26 Reuters dispatch reported: “’We want him to stay,’ said
Evo Morales, a lower house deputy and head of the main opposition party,
Movement Toward Socialism. ‘We and other parties think the proposal
for early elections is unconstitutional.’”
There are neighborhood organizations in El Alto that have a
revolutionary democratic character. They are organized by a new vanguard
that arose in the mass movement that toppled Sanchez de Lozada. That
movement also revived the leading role of the trade-union federation, the
COB, in which revolutionary Marxist traditions created by an influential
Trotskyist movement in the past remain important. There are also radical
indigenous nationalist movements.
Thus, the material is there for a revolution that can inspire a
revival of the movement toward socialism in the entire southern part of
Latin America.
Revolutionary currents in Argentina and Brazil have been looking to
Bolivia since the mass movement of 2003.
But time is obviously running out. The longer there is no
alternative to parliamentary rule, the more the role of bourgeois
politicians like Mesa will be
strengthened. And the pendulum threatens to swing back toward a
brutal right-wing regime that will suppress the mass protests in order to
be able sell out the country’s natural resources to big imperialist companies.
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