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Reporter's Notebook: Luis Gomez

Today's Combat in La Paz

(Posted in Spanish at 4:30 pm)

Guest what, kind readers…. as authentic journalist Claudia Espinoza said at midday, when we ran into each other in the middle of today’s marches: “Once again, we have to write about thousands of marchers who shut down La Paz and clash with the police as they try to take Plaza Murillo.” Well, exactly right… today, everyone again descended from El Alto into La Paz, this time with the addition of several contingents of miners. The miners numbered several thousand today, and arrived heavily armed with dynamite.
And while the clashes with police have still not ended at this hour of the afternoon, the “professional” politicians are still wrapped up in Carlos Mesa’s resignation, the presidential succession and the pressure from the Santa Cruz right wing… but nothing has changed, except for a considerable rise in the people’s anger.  

Last night, while crybaby Carlos Mesa said that he was again putting up his resignation for consideration by the National Congress, Narco News asked an Aymara leader (from the Omasuyos province) if that would change the situation… “No, this doesn’t resolve things. As long as we haven’t nationalized, our position does not change. We will come down into La Paz tomorrow, prepared to fight,” was his brief anwer.

Evo Morales, a few minutes after the resignation (and yes, kind readers, Mesa appeared once again before national television cameras), said that it had all been just “a new show from the president of the republic.” And Evo, making it clear that Hormando Vaa Diez could not be allowed to take power by right of succession, said that the best thing would be for Vaca Diez and the president of the Chamber of Deputies, Mario Cossio, to renoune that right.

If those two congressional leaders will not accept the office, the president of the Supreme Court, Eduardo Rodriguez, has already announced that he would accept, in order to guarantee that general elections would be held within three months.

Today, while the politicians of the National Congress, particularly from the right, spoke of whether to accept the resignation of still-president Mesa, the Aymara peasant farmers united with the residents of the two slopes of poor neighborhoods rising above La Paz. Then unionized miners and miners organized into cooperatives arrived. Everyone arrived, between 10:30 and 11:30, at the enter of the protest, the Plaza de los Héroes. “Let’s go to Plaza Murillo,” said the miners; “let’s go,” said the Aymara peasant farmers… “let’s go…” and today’s battle began.

The combatants carry dynamite blast caps and rocks on one side, and tear gas and rubber bullets on the other. There have been several arrests and the police confiscated hundreds of dynamite cartridges and a few Molotov cocktails. The explosions shook nearby windows, and white clouds have been rising constantly from various points in downtown La Paz.

Confidentially, we had learned that, since an emergency session of congress was expected for today to consider Carlos Mesa’s renunciation, the social movements did not plan to take the capital buildings today… they were going to give the politicians a chance, one last chance, to answer them.

But Hormando Vaca Diez and the members of congress from the eastern departments of Bolivia (those working for autonomy), refusing to meet “while there are no guarantees (of security).” That is, not in La Paz…. Are they afraid of something here?

Are they afraid of the more than 100 blockades around the country. Because, for example... Santa Cruz is now living through its third day with all the highways connecting it to the rest of the world blockaded… the region’s peasant farmers and indigenous have not moved. In La Paz as well, the shortages are now obvious… since yesterday there is no bread being sold, no gasoline, no gas for cooking…

Or are Hormando Vaca Diez and the other politicians afraid of the groups fighting in the streets of La Paz? Today, one of the slogans was clear: “Send Vaca to the slaughterhouse!” (“Vaca” is Spanish for “cow.”)  The shouts of “die!” hurled against the Congress president (who seemed quite excited yesterday at the prospect of taking power) were no joke… the leader of the Movement of Unemployed Workers of La Paz, Jaime Alanoca, told us at the beginning of the day: “This is the big one…  we won’t allow Hormando to govern for even two hours.”

“Tomorrow, we will sack this place,” was one of the slogans heard among the Aymara… and, surely taking that as a warning, the police tried to disperse the people unsuccessfully. This, and, for example, the march of more than 20,000 people today in Cochabamba (which the local farmers, the same ones behind the “water war” of 2000) have also blockaded, is what Hormando Vaca Diez is afraid of: he knows that we are now in outright civil war, and that if he assumes the presidency, it could get worse.

The basic demands on the Bolivian state, which have caused it its worst crisis in two decades, have not changed… as the Aymara leader said, nationalization (and, for many, going ahead with a constitutional assembly) remain the most important.

A few blocks from where Carlos Mesa sits in turmoil, while the guillotine of fate falls on him, the demonstrators are regrouping, enduring the teargas, raising barricades, and nothing can stop them…

What is next? We don’t know, but in these moments we are heading towards the front lines of combat to find out what the people, fighting for democracy from below, have to say… prepare yourselves, readers, because the teargas can take your breath away…

Comments

The Right Would Make Vaca Diez President

This afternoon the leaders of the Revolutionary Nationalist Movement (MNR) and the Movement of the Revolutionary Left (MIR) parties, the same who made the Sánchez de Lozada administration possible three years ago, are now speaking the same language: they are thinking of handing power to the coup-plotting Senate president, Hormando Vaca Diez.. with this, they say, they hope to maintain a legal framework, if they can even meet, of course.

It is just after 6:15 p.m. in La Paz, the people are already more relaxed and the clashes have ended for today, or so it seems. But the right-wing succession pact could even further unleash the power of the social movements.

Even Evo Morales, who together with his Movement Toward Socialism (MAS) party has maintained a “legalist” position, has now announced that this development will be answered by an endless mobilization, to continue until Vaca Diez is gone.

The right seems to have lost its fear for now, and is reforming the coalition that brought this country the massacres of October 2003 and the popular insurrection that ut short Sánchez de Lozada’s second term.

Don’t be surprised, kind readers, by this new play by the political parties. This afternoon, U.S. State Department spokesman Sean McCormack demanded that the Bolivians reach an solution that is “peaceful, democratic, and constitutional to these tensions”…

In these moments, this can be nothing but support for the Bolivian politicians, for them to continue usurping the political representation of the people who are fighting in the streets…

Vaca Diez: Congress Will Meet Thursday in Sucre

Arguing that it would be too difficult to meet in La Paz, Vaca Diez has announced that the next session of Congress will be this Thursday, at 10:30 a.m. Appealing to the diverse sectors of society to heed the necessity for the Catholic church-led dialog, Vaa Diez defended the need to maintain the unity of Bolivia.

As he announced that the first item on the session’s agenda in Sucre, Bolivia’s nominal capital (though all government functions are in La Paz) would be the consideration of Carlos Mesa’s resignation, Senator Vaca Diez also mentioned that those who think that Bolivia is ready for a “radical government” to end poverty are wrong. “That path,” he said, “leads to exclusion and disintegration.”

Later, a master of evasive rhetoric, Vaca Diez refused to say whether he would take power, as the consitution allows, claiming that while Mesa’s resignation is not finalized he has nothing to say about it.

The rural Aymara leaders, who are preparing for a new day of struggle, responded with a simple warning upon learning of this: “Even if he leaves, that resolves nothing… we will keep going and will descend (on La Paz) tomorrow.”

Vaca Diez, while many take as a given that he will become the next president of Bolivia, dismissed the necessity of dialog with them. “The solution, all of it, all of it, is within the framework of the constitution, of institutionalism, and nothing else,” he concluded.

Kind readers, this thing is heating up, the plot is thickening… stay with us tomorrow…

Poll: Majority of Bolivians Reject Vaca Diez

According to the Financial Times, of London:

With the congressional palace in La Paz besieged by demonstrators, Hormando Vaca Díez, president of the Senate, has called on the legislature to convene on Thursday. Congress will vote on whether to accept President Carlos Mesa's offer on Monday night to step down.

According to the constitution, Mr Vaca Díez is next in line. Should he refuse the presidency, it would pass to the head of the lower house and then to Eduardo Rodríguez, president of the Supreme Court, who would call new elections.

In a poll by the Apoyo organisation, 55 per cent of respondents said they would support Mr Rodríguez and fresh elections, while only 16 per cent backed Mr Vaca Díez to serve out the rest of the presidential term, which ends in 2007.

And apparently one of those calling for new elections is outgoing President Carlos Mesa:

On Tuesday night Mr Mesa begged Mr Vaca Díez to allow fresh elections. After a day in which police clashed with thousands of protesters in central La Paz, the president said: “The only way to avoid further violence is to hold elections.”

Despite his official reluctance, indications suggest Mr Vaca Díez might take the job. This has alarmed the left; the congressional leader is a landowner from Santa Cruz, the south-eastern region where business leaders are politically powerful, foreign energy companies are based, and which has a strong autonomist movement.

A consummate political operator, Mr Vaca Díez, who represents for many the discredited traditional political parties, looks to have the support of a congressional majority, the armed forces, and possibly Washington. He has shown leadership by signing into law a controversial hydrocarbons bill that Mr Mesa refused to touch.

Mr Mesa, whose predecessor had to flee after sending troops against protesters, has resisted using force against the demonstrations. Mr Vaca D´ez might be more likely to do so. “The country is on the verge of civil war,” Mr Mesa warned on Tuesday night.

La tension se siente.

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