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Washington sees threat to stability
Bolivia rocked by mass protests over energy law
By Bill Van Auken
3 June 2005
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Bolivias capital of La Paz has entered its second week
of mass protests by workers, indigenous peasants and students
demanding the nationalization of the countrys energy industry.
Meanwhile, the government agency responsible for maintaining
the countrys roadways reported Wednesday that 60 percent
of the countrys highways have been blocked, including all
major routes into the capital. Peasants and rural teachers have
piled rocks, logs and other materials across the roads. Truckers
have also gone on strike, and food and fuel supplies are rapidly
dwindling in the city.
La Paz has witnessed some of the biggest protests in the countrys
history as tens of thousands of peasants, teachers, miners and
other workers have poured into the city and laid siege to government
buildings. Various reporters estimated the largest of the demonstrations
at 50,000. Throwing sticks of dynamite and rocks, the demonstrators
have confronted riot police using tear gas, rubber bullets and
water cannon.
The sparks for these upheavals were the approval by Bolivias
Congress of a new energy law last month and the drive by the countrys
wealthier regionsbacked by the oil companies and foreign
capitalto achieve political autonomy.
The government of Bolivian President Carlos Mesa, who came
to power after the October 2003 upheavals that toppled his Washington-backed
predecessor, Gonzalo Sanchez Lozada (now in Miami exile), appears
to be on the brink of collapse.
Mesa was Sanchez Lozadas vice president, but distanced
himself from him after government forces massacred scores of unarmed
protesters, igniting insurrectionary conditions. Like his predecessor,
he is a supporter of the policies of privatization, economic austerity
and subordination to the transnationals that have left more than
two-thirds of the population in poverty while creating unprecedented
social polarization.
When the new energy law was passed in mid-May, Mesa, who opposed
the measure from the right, sought to avoid responsibility and
the political consequences by allowing the Congress to enact it
without his signature.
The effect, however, has been far from what he intended. The
additional taxes contained in the measure antagonized foreign
companies that are reaping massive profits from the exploitation
of Bolivias natural gas reserves. It also served to fuel
the drive by the right-wing and wealthy elite based in the city
of Santa Cruz to seek autonomy for the southern and eastern provinces,
where the bulk of Bolivias oil and gas reserves are located.
At the same time, the law provoked the growing anger of the
countrys impoverished majority, which sees control of the
countrys natural resources as a means of ending decades
of social misery.
Demands for Mesas resignation have come from the residents
of El Alto, the impoverished working class city outside of La
Paz, who have marched on Congress and the presidential palace.
The same demand was made Wednesday by the head of the Eastern
Agricultural Chamber, representing the countrys wealthiest
landowners. Expressing ruling class impatience over Mesas
failure to crush the revolt, he declared, The president
doesnt have the pants to govern.
The energy sector was privatized in 1996, falling under the
effective control of foreign companies, including British Petroleum
and British Gas, Total of France, Repsol YPF of Spain and Petrobras
of Brazil. The scandal-plagued US corporation Enron previously
held a major interest as well.
Since privatization, estimates of the countrys gas and
petroleum reserves have increased dramatically to 53 trillion
cubic feet, second only to Venezuela on the South American continent.
While the foreign companies have cried foul over the new law
raising royalties and taxes, the privatization has left the key
issue of setting the price of gas exports in their hands. Thus,
Bolivian gas is exported at a cut rate, while the country is forced
to pay market prices for any oil that it must import. Meanwhile,
the royalties and taxes, whatever their percentage, are paid on
a fraction of the real value of the resources that are being extracted
from the country.
As a study prepared by the Center of Information and Documentation
of Bolivia points out, these sales are in any case
fictitious, with the gas passing from a Bolivian subsidiary of
the Spanish energy giant Repsol, for example, to an Argentine
or Chilean subsidiary of the same corporation.
Under these conditions, once Bolivian gas crosses the
border, it is converted into thermo-electricity, liquefied natural
gas, methanol (bound for the US and Europe) and other petrochemical
products, which allows the transnationals to reap enormous profits
at Bolivias expense, the study declares.
The militancy of the demonstrations has gone far beyond the
intentions of the existing opposition leaderships. The Movement
Towards Socialism (MAS) headed by the coca growers leader Evo
Morales has failed to press the nationalization demand, calling
instead for an increase in the royalties paid by the foreign companies
from 18 percent to 50 percenta rate roughly equivalent to
the royalties paid on British oil.
A law has already been passed and therefore it is not
an issue for the Congress, MAS legislator Antonio Peredo
told the Argentine daily Clarin. According to the
constitution, nationalizations are the prerogative of the executive
branch through a supreme decree.
As he spoke, tens of thousandsincluding much of the MASs
own basewere marching in La Paz and other parts of the country
demanding nationalization. An ever-wider layer of Bolivian society,
including organizations representing teachers, health workers
and bakers as well as the federation of neighborhood associations,
has endorsed the demand.
Morales, whose party won 19 percentthe largest shareof
the vote in the last municipal elections and is the second largest
block in the Bolivian Congress, played a central role in politically
disarming the mass movement that erupted in 2003 and allowing
Mesas installation as the new president.
Attempting to play the same role in the current crisis, the
MAS reached a vague agreement with the ruling party Wednesday
to organize a simultaneous debate over the two contradictory demands
of autonomy and the convening of a constituent assembly.
The deal was struck between party leaders, as the Congress
could not be assembled because of the masses of demonstrators
who have taken over the center of the capital.
The demand for a referendum on autonomy, put forward by representatives
of the wealthy class of farmers, landlords and bankers who dominate
the Santa Cruz region, is aimed at striking a separate bargain
with the foreign corporations at the expense of the rest of the
country. The call for a constituent assembly is aimed at forestalling
such a referendum, and is backed by the MAS and other opposition
forces based in the west of the country.
An indication of the explosive tensions over these issuesand
the improbability that they will be resolved through a legislative
compromisecame in the form of a violent clash in the city
of Santa Cruz on Wednesday. A march made up predominantly of indigenous
peasants demanding the convening of a constituent assembly was
set upon by armed fascist thugs of the Santa Cruz Youth Union.
Leaders of the peasant group issued a statement declaring, We
will not allow the aggression of the fascists. We will return,
and the next time we will be ready to repel all aggression.
The Bolivian Workers Federation, or COB, the countrys
main trade union organization, criticized the congressional deal.
To trade nationalization for the constituent assembly is
a betrayal, said Jaime Solares, the COB executive secretary,
who added a demagogic threat to burn the parliament
if Congress did not approve a nationalization law.
The COB leader, however, has advanced no independent alternative.
On the contrary, he recently declared his hope that a government
headed by a patriotic and honest military officer
would replace Mesa. He said he was willing to accept the rule
of a colonel or a general who he hoped would be like
Venezuelas Hugo Chavez. When he made this view public before
a rally of workers, Solares was met with a resounding cry of no!
The historical record of the COBs misleadership includes
its subordinationbacked by the revisionist Partido Obrero
Revolucionario (POR) of Guillermo Loraof the working class
to the left military ruler Gen. Juan Jose Torres at
the beginning of the 1970s. His short-lived regime paved the way
to the seizure of power by the right-wing dictator Gen. Hugo Banzer
in 1971, ushering in a long period of brutal military dictatorship.
That the military will intervene is a real possibility. The
head of the Bolivian armed forces, Admiral Luis Aranda, was compelled
to make a public statement denying coup preparations
by the military. He also repudiated a pair of lieutenant colonels,
calling themselves the Generational Military Movement, who advocated
Mesas replacement with a revolutionary government
composed of all sectors of Bolivian society. Both
officers were sacked.
MAS leader Morales, meanwhile, reported that elements of the
Santa Cruz bourgeoisie were conspiring with sections of the military
to bring about a right-wing coup aimed at crushing social protest.
For its part, the Bush administration has made it clear that
it is following the Bolivian events with growing alarm. We
are very concerned about serious challenges to Bolivias
stability from radical opposition groups that threaten the countrys
hard-won gains in democracy, economic development, and the fight
against drug trafficking, Jonathan Farrar, a US State Department
official in charge of international narcotics and law enforcement
affairs, testified before a Congressional subcommittee May 25.
Meanwhile, Richard Boucher, the State Department spokesman,
said Wednesday that Washington was in contact with the [Bolivian]
government, we are also in contact with other nations that are
very concerned and worried by the situation there.
This last reference was apparently to the governments of Nestor
Kirchner in Argentina and Luiz Inacio Lula da Silva in Brazil.
While both have postured as left alternatives to Washingtons
policies in Latin America, their governments are participants
in the exploitative relations worked out between the foreign oil
companies and the Bolivian regime. Likewise, they both fear the
potential domestic impact of a continuing revolutionary crisis
in Bolivia.
Boucher added that US discussions with the besieged government
of Carlos Mesa were on the security situation, about the
situation as regards democracy and maintaining the democracy in
Bolivia.
As elsewhere in the world, this US struggle for democracy
translates into maintaining or installing regimes that assure
the unfettered operations of the multinationals and US access
to cheap energy supplies. That these aims could be furthered through
such undemocratic means as Washingtons backing a seizure
of power by the Bolivian military is a real danger.
The entire Andean region is a tinderbox, as evidenced by last
Aprils ouster of the pro-US President Lucio Gutierrez by
mass protests in Ecuador and the mounting unrest confronting the
deeply unpopular regime of Perus President Alejandro Toledo.
Under these conditions, Washington sees the Bolivian events as
a serious threat.
See Also:
Latin America's social crisis
Unemployment, child labor grow side-by-side
[11 May 2005]
Bolivia: Mass upheavals
topple US-backed president
[21 October 2003]
Nearly 90 killed
by troops
Bush administration backs massacres in Bolivia
[17 October 2003]
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