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Judi Lynn Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Tue May-27-08 01:38 AM
Original message
Bolivian Racism Runs Amok in Sucre
Tuesday, May 27, 2008
Bolivian Racism Runs Amok in Sucre

Racism Run Amok

On Saturday May 24th President Evo Morales was scheduled to visit the city of Sucre on the commemoration of the 199th anniversary of Latin America’s first steps of independence from Spain, General Sucre's "first shout of liberty (May 25, 1809)." The President planned on delivering ambulances for Chuquisaca’s rural communities and to announce development projects for the region, all actions typical of what Presidents do here on such dates. The events were to take place in the “Patriotic” Stadium, surrounded by and under the protection of indigenous people from different parts of the province.

However, the night before the event, organized groups antagonistic to Morales began to provoke disturbances around the stadium and stoned a house where a fundraising dinner was taking place for a MAS candidate for Governor, Walter Valda.

Then on Saturday, the day of the anniversary, the anti-Morales violence went into racist overdrive. Mobs armed with sticks and dynamites confronted the police and military. The government retreated the public's armed forces, cancelled all scheduled parades (of the military and police), and President Morales’ visit.

With the police and military presence gone, the indigenous peasants who had come to see the President were left face-to-face with armed civilians from urban Sucre, among them university students of the public University of San Francisco Xavier. More than two dozen indigenous peasants were beaten and captured, their few possessions were taken away and they were forced to walk for three miles and then kneel shirtless in front of Sucre’s House of Liberty. Sucre mobs humiliated their indigenous captives in a repeat of a ritual from the most brutal pages of colonialism. Under threat of violence, and half naked in a public square the captives were forced to apologize for the offense of coming to the city to receive President Morales. "Llamas, ask forgiveness," the mob ordered. Among the captives was the mayor of the rural town of Mojocoya.

Video footage of the abuse can be seen here.*

*This is the link:
http://es.youtube.com/watch?v=iDNRhLKQyzk

Journalists in Sucre who bore witness to the racism unleashed also became targets. Yesterday, Red Erbol, a prominent association of radios and various institutions of communication denounced the attack of Red Erbol affiliated journalist María Elena Paco Durán of ACLO. Ms. Durán was attacked and insulted, prevented from carrying out her work as a reporter. According to Ms. Durán, at one point, the aggressors threatened to drench her with alcohol and set her on fire.

The Campesino Federation of Chuquisaca demanded the resignation of Jaime Barrón, Vice-Chancellor of the University, and of the President of Sucre's Interinstitutional Committee, a civic group that has been a leading force in anti-Morales protests. Threatening to block roads and close off valves of gas pipelines (if Barrón didn't resign), the Campesino Federation accused Barrón of promoting violence and racism.

Leaders of the Inter-institutional Committee, though denying any role in the violence inflicted upon the campesinos, have pleaded forgiveness for the degrading act committed in front of the House of Liberty.

More:
http://www.democracyctr.org/blog/2008/05/bolivian-racism-runs-amok-in-sucre.html
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Judi Lynn Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Thu May-29-08 02:41 AM
Response to Original message
1. BOLIVIA: Local Indigenous Leaders Beaten and Publicly Humiliated
I thought I'd seen a thread by magbana on this subject, but I can't find it anywhere, to attach this article to it.

People REALLY need to know this is going on, has been going on, and deserves some swift action from the Bolivian government. Love that right-wing racist "democracy." It stands in a league of its own, doesn't it?

~~~~~~~~~

BOLIVIA: Local Indigenous Leaders Beaten and Publicly Humiliated
By Franz Chávez

LA PAZ, May 27 (IPS) - Bolivia may have its first-ever indigenous president, but racism is alive and well in this country, as demonstrated by the public humiliation of a group of around 50 indigenous mayors, town councillors and community leaders in the south-central city of Sucre.

The incident, which shook the country but received little attention from the international press, occurred on Saturday, when President Evo Morales, an Aymara Indian, was to appear in a public ceremony in Sucre to deliver 50 ambulances for rural communities and announce funding for municipal projects.

But in the early hours of Saturday morning, organised groups opposed to Morales began to surround the stadium where he was to appear a few hours later. Confronting the police and soldiers with sticks, stones and dynamite, they managed to occupy the stadium.

The president cancelled his visit, and the security forces were withdrawn, to avoid violent clashes and bloodshed.

But violent elements of the Interinstitutional Committee, a conservative pro-autonomy, anti-Morales civic group that is backed by the local university and other bodies, continued to harass and beat supporters of the governing Movement to Socialism (MAS) and anyone who appeared to belong to one of the country’s indigenous communities.

More:
http://www.ipsnews.net/news.asp?idnews=42539
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Judi Lynn Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Fri May-30-08 03:01 AM
Response to Original message
2. Violencia: Una turba allana casas, flagela y toma rehenes a campesinos en Sucre Violence: A mob pave
Edited on Fri May-30-08 03:46 AM by Judi Lynn
Violence: A mob paves houses, flogging and takes hostages peasants in Sucre
A mob of youths raided the morning several houses on the slopes of Sucre, where they were housed peasants who arrived in the city to participate in the event organized by the presidency of the Republic at the stadium Fatherland.

After the beating, several peasants were moved towards the square on May 25 in Sucre to be forced "to apologize" kneeling before the crowd mobilized.

Young people arremetieron with kicks and puñetes directly against the face of peasants who were surprised twisted on the floor by heavy blows they received.

Thus, an aggressor robust approximately 25 years old attacked with kicks aimed directly at the mouth of a peasant thin over 60 years, who did the only thing that is trying to cover his face with his hands bloodied, falling to the floor after being pushed to blows from side to side.

The peasant women with tears in her eyes filled with helplessness and also suffered physical assaults and verbal, full of adjectives issued with fury racist aggressors.

While these events occurred, the Government decided to instruct the withdrawal of troops from the National Police and Armed Forces who were overtaken by mobilized.

The prime minister, Alfredo Rada, accused the Inter-Agency Committee be directly responsible for acts of violence in Sucre, which left dozens injured, including a journalist Aclo.

http://www.tarijalibre.tarijaindustrial.com/en/2008/05/violencia-una-turba-allana-casas-flagela-y-toma-rehenes-a-campesinos-en-sucre/
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Judi Lynn Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Fri May-30-08 03:48 AM
Response to Original message
3. Colonial backlash: reflections on recent racist violence in Bolivia
Edited on Fri May-30-08 03:58 AM by Judi Lynn
Colonial backlash: reflections on recent racist violence in Bolivia
Posted: Wed, 28 May 2008 19:58:00 +0000
Nick Buxton, May 28

Through the grainy print, I could just make out three men in suits and hats haughtily bristling their guns. At their feet were a line of indigenous men and women on their knees, heads bowed, the gaunt look of humiliation etched on their faces. Beneath the photo the caption: “Capture of savages in Santiago de Chiquitos,1883.”

I meant to challenge the gentle motherly museum owner in the small village in the eastern region of Bolivia about the inscription, but shamefully didn’t. My silence scratched at my conscience for a few days like an infected insect bite.

What I never expected though was to see a similar image live on TV a month later. Yet three nights ago, I sat sickened and disturbed as I watched a line of campesinos kneeling, their shirts stripped off, forced into mumbling chants against Evo and in favour of Sucre whilst a gang of students deliriously shouted racist insults.

Other images flickered repetitively on screen – indigenous men stumbling pushed aggressively by angry crowds, bewildered farmers showing huge bloody gashes on their heads, a camera zooming in on an house on the hill surrounded by adrenalin-charged men accompanied by the flat tones of the news commentator saying that a few campesinos were hiding inside the house. Local politicians without shame justified the violence arguing that it was in protest at Evo Morales’ visit to the region scheduled for that day.

And then back to the square, and the loud war-cries of the noticeably mixed-race young thugs. “Este es Sucre, Carajo, Este es Sucre Carajo” (This is Sucre, goddamit. This is Sucre, goddamit.) Young urban men, some no doubt with campesino grandparents spitting out hatred directed at their own. Next to me watching the TV coverage, my Bolivian flatmate was crying.

Sadly this incident isn’t unique. I have heard of ever more examples of attacks on indigenous people and particularly any leaders associated with the government. Most are ignored by the press. Just two days before the recent events in Sucre, two Congress MAS deputies’ denounced the fact that they had been attacked and threatened on a visit to Sucre. It received two paragraphs in one of the national newspapers.

Whilst in Lima, I talked to Wilmer Flores, a MAS deputy from the Sucre region who recounted how he had been chased from the public square and cornered by a group of students who stamped on him, beat him, shouting “Kill the Indian. Let’s kill them all one by one.” It was as one of them started with broken glass to try and scratch his eyes out that a policeman happened to pass and the group escaped. His attempts to find his potential murderers have met a brick wall of complicity and evasion from all Sucre’s legal authorities.

Watching TV, I noticed that the brutalised campesinos were kneeling in Sucre’s central square, in front of the “Casa de Libertad” (Freedom House) from where Bolivia’s independence was declared. It was the same square where Deputy Wilmer Flores was seen, chased and almost lost his life. Similarly in Santa Cruz, various attacks have taken place in its main central square.

The choice of location for the Right’s violence is no coincidence. It was here in the heart of Sucre that Bolivia as an exclusive state which marginalized its indigenous majority took shape. It is from key municipal and state buildings in Santa Cruz and Sucre that a coterie of privileged families has led a vitriolic backlash against even the possibility of social justice in Bolivia. In Sucre these families, including the Jaime Barron, the Rector of the University and the city mayor Aydee Nava have instigated violence, egged on by a rabid media, in an attempt to stop the constitutional assembly last November.

But the use of the public square for repression and exclusion has an even deeper significance. For up to 1952, indigenous people were not even allowed to set foot in squares like that of La Paz. Now more than 50 years later, with the arrival of an indigenous President, the Right is trying to turn back the clock and through violence make it equally impossible for indigenous peoples to cross public city squares.

The roots and nature of racism in Bolivia are complex and deep, but in essence I believe what I am witnessing is a colonial backlash. A hatred sown in divisions from colonial time, that has persisted insidiously in the structures of all power, and one that has got a grip even in those who have indigenous parents or grandparents. All it took was a change in balance of power and a fear of indigenous leadership to unleash a deeply ugly side to colonised Bolivian society. And there have been enough powerful families fearful of losing their privileges to exploit the already latent sore.

Several centuries ago, the young priest Bartolome de las Casas writing about the atrocities of the Spanish against indigenous people said: “My eyes have seen these acts so foreign to human nature, and now I tremble as I write.” Five centuries later, I too am trembling watching the horror of racism and colonisation unleashed on Bolivia’s streets.

http://feeds.feedburner.com/blogspot/PTDt
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Judi Lynn Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Sat May-31-08 03:55 PM
Response to Original message
4. Two more Bolivian provinces hold 'autonomy' referendums
Two more Bolivian provinces hold 'autonomy' referendums
11 hours ago

LA PAZ (AFP) — Two Bolivian provinces will take Santa Cruz's lead and vote Sunday for autonomy measures that President Evo Morales has branded illegal, amid rising tension between rich lowlands and poor highlands in this landlocked nation.

While small in population and economic clout, Beni and Pando in Bolivia's eastern Amazon basin on Friday defiantly set up polling stations for the plebiscites, as local politicians wound up their campaigns against Morales's socialist government.

~snip~
All four provinces from the eastern lowland region are resisting land and resource redistribution policies pushed by Morales that would benefit more the poorer, mostly indigenous Bolivians of the mountainous western regions.

~snip~
Both their governors belong to the right-wing Podemos party, the main opposition group to Evo Morales.

In Beni, there are 134,468 eligible voters; in Pando, 28,990.

More:
http://afp.google.com/article/ALeqM5jyFJ-Jw7H3V-FP27P8tC-u0pZjag
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