Language

Reporter's Notebook: Luis Gomez

Thursday Brings a New Assault on Power in Bolivia

The day was a bit rough in La Paz, but not so much as in the last few weeks: the tension has moved to other places, mainly Sucre, the nominal capital of Bolivia where the National Congress will supposedly meet to decide on whether Carlos Mesa will leave the presidency.

In El Alto, the organizations there decided this afternoon to create a Popular Assembly, to begin, now, the first moves towards self-government. Meanwhile, thousands of miners and many Aymara peasant farmers are on their way to Sucre, which in these hours is already surrounded by that area’s rural poor. Downtown La Paz was nearly deserted this morning after weeks of mobilizations. There were a few small marches, such as the El Alto bus drivers’ union and several hundred peasant farmers from around the country allied with the Movement Toward Socialism (MAS). But what is now well known is that the gasoline is gone, the food scarce, and because of this, urban life is declining.

The great majority of the miners who faced the police with dynamite downtown yesterday have already departed towards Sucre. And thousands more head there as well. Among them, hundreds of rural Aymaras, who decided to go as well this morning to surround the National Congress and stop its president, Senator Hormando Vaca Díez, from taking the office of president of the republic.

Vaca Díez, in a conference early this morning, said that he is willing to assume command and reaffirm the weakened Bolivian right’s political line.

Tomorrow, we will try to learn whether this conflict will deepen, who decided its end, or if there is a possibility of calling early elections, as Mesa proposed last night…

Kind readers, renew your strength tonight and wait for tomorrow…

Add comment

Our Policy on Comment Submissions: Co-publishers of Narco News (which includes The Narcosphere and The Field) may post comments without moderation. All co-publishers comment under their real name, have contributed resources or volunteer labor to this project, have filled out this application and agreed to some simple guidelines about commenting.

Narco News has recently opened its comments section for submissions to moderated comments (that’s this box, here) by everybody else. More than 95 percent of all submitted comments are typically approved, because they are on-topic, coherent, don’t spread false claims or rumors, don’t gratuitously insult other commenters, and don’t engage in commerce, spam or otherwise hijack the thread. Narco News reserves the right to reject any comment for any reason, so, especially if you choose to comment anonymously, the burden is on you to make your comment interesting and relevant. That said, as you can see, hundreds of comments are approved each week here. Good luck in your comment submission!

The content of this field is kept private and will not be shown publicly.
  • Web page addresses and e-mail addresses turn into links automatically.

More information about formatting options

CAPTCHA
This question is for testing whether you are a human visitor and to prevent automated spam submissions.

User login

Reporters' Notebooks