What’s going on in Bolivia? Let’s get educated.

Roger Burbach has written a very good article that gives the recent background of the current conflict in Bolivia.  You know the situation must be something different than the US media is portraying it to be, and you know that Morales is a different type of person than the US government paints him to be.  That’s just one of the facts of life.  (Interesting side note:  The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-Day Saints has pulled its 102 missionaries out of Bolivia, to return after things settle down).

Here is his article reprinted here in full because it is so good.  The credit goes entirely to Mr. Burbach where this article was found at counterpunch.org:

As Bolivia teeters on the brink of civil war, President Evo Morales staunchly maintains his commitment to constructing a popular democracy by working within the state institutions that brought him to power. The show down with the right wing is taking place against the backdrop of the thirty-fifth anniversary of the overthrow of Salvador Allende, the heroic if tragic president of Chile who believed that the formal democratic state he inherited could be peacefully transformed to usher in a socialist society.

Like Allende, Morales faces a powerful economic and political elite aligned with the United States that is bent on reversing the limited reforms he has been able to implement during his nearly three years in power. Early on, Morales–Bolivia’s first indigenous president–moved assertively to exert greater control over the natural gas and oil resources of the country, sharply increasing the hydro-carbon tax, and then using a large portion of this revenue to provide a universal pension to all those over sixty years old, most of whom live in poverty and are indigenous.

The self-proclaimed Civic Committees in Media Luna (Half Moon)–Bolivia’s four eastern departments–have orchestrated a rebellion against these changes, demanding departmental autonomy and control of the hydro-carbon revenues, as well as an end to agrarian reform and even control of the police forces. The Santa Cruz Civic Committee, dominated by agro-industrial interests, is supporting the Cruceño Youth Union (UJC), an affiliated group that acts as a para-military organization, seizing and fire bombing government offices, and attacking Indian and peasant organizations that dare to support the national government.

Morales’ efforts to transform the institutions of the country have focused on the popularly elected Constituent Assembly to draft a new constitution. The assembly was convened in mid 2006 with representatives from Morales’ political party, the Movement Towards Socialism (MAS) holding 54 percent of the seats. In the drafting of the new constitution, the right wing political parties, led by Podemos (We Can), insisted that a two-thirds vote was needed even for the working committees to approve the different sections of the constitution. When they were overruled and a new constitution was close to being approved in November, 2007, members of the assembly, including its indigenous president, Silvia Lazarte, were assaulted in the streets of Sucre, the old nineteenth century capital where the assembly was being held.

Using words that evoked Allende’s last stand in the Chilean presidential palace, Evo Morales declared “dead or alive, I will have a new constitution for the country.” He quartered the assembly in an old castle under military protection where it adopted a constitution that has to be approved in a national referendum. Labeling Morales a “dictator,” the civic committees and the departmental prefects (governors) of Media Luna were able to stall the vote on the referendum, and instead organized departmental referendums for autonomy in May of this year that were ruled unconstitutional by the National Electoral Council.

Taking recourse in democracy rather than force, and searching for a national consensus, Morales then held up the vote on the new constitution, and instead put his presidency on the line in a recall referendum in which his mandate as well as that of the prefects of the departments could be revoked. On August 10, voters went to the polls and Morales won a resounding 67 percent of the vote, receiving a majority of the ballots in 95 of the country’s 112 districts with even the Media Luna department of Pando voting in his favor.

However, the insurgent prefects also had their mandates renewed. Based on the illegal, departmental plebiscites held in May, they moved to take control of Santa Cruz, the richest department. UJC shock troops roamed the streets of the city and surrounding towns, attacking and repressing any opposition by local indigenous movements and MAS-allied forces. Not wanting to provoke an outright rebellion, Evo Morales did not deploy the army or use the local police, leaving the urban area under the effective control of the UJC.

Simultaneously, the right wing–led by the Santa Cruz Civic Committee–began sewing economic instability, seeking to destabilize the Morales government much like the CIA-backed opposition did in Chile against Salvador Allende in the early 1970s. As in Chile, the rural business elites and allied truckers engaged in “strikes,” withholding or refusing to ship produce to the urban markets in the western Andes where the Indian population is concentrated, while selling commodities on the black market at high prices. The Confederation of Private Businesses of Bolivia called for a national producers’ shutdown if the government refused “to change its economic policies.”

The social movements allied with the government have mobilized against this right wing offensive. In the Media Luna, a union coalition of indigenous peoples and peasants campaigned against voting in the autonomy referendums, and have taken on the bands of the UJC as they try to intimidate and terrorize people. In the Andean highlands, the social movements descended on the capital La Paz in demonstrations backing the Morales’ government, including a large mobilization in June that stormed the American embassy because of its support for the right wing. In July, the federation of coca growers in the Chapare, where US anti-drug operations are centered, expelled the US Agency for International Development.

This past week the Civic Committees stepped up their efforts to take control of the Media Luna departments. In Santa Cruz on September 8, crowds of youth lead by the UJC seized government offices, including the land reform office, the tax office, state TV studios, the nationalized telephone company Entel, and set fire to the offices of a non-governmental human rights organization that promotes indigenous rights and provides legal advice. The military police, who had been dispatched to protect many of these offices, were forced to retreat, at times experiencing bloody blows that they were forbidden from responding to due to standing orders from La Paz not to use their weapons. The commanding general of the military police, while angrily denouncing the violent demonstrators, said that the military could take no action unless Evo Morales signed a degree authorizing the use of firearms.

What was in effect occurring was a struggle between Morales and the military over who would assume ultimate responsibility for the fighting and deaths that would ensue with a military intervention in Media Luna. The armed forces do not support the autonomous rebellion because it threatens the geographic integrity of the Bolivian nation. Yet they are reluctant to intervene because under past governments, when they fired on and killed demonstrators in the streets of La Paz, they were blamed for the bloodshed.

On September 10, as violence intensified throughout Media Luna, Evo Morales expelled US ambassador Philip Goldberg for “conspiring against democracy.” The month before, Goldberg had met with the prefect of Santa Cruz, Ruben Costas, who subsequently declared himself “governor” of the autonomous department and ordered the formal take over of government offices–including those collecting tax revenues. Costas is the principal leader of the rebellious prefects, and the main antagonist of Evo Morales.

September 11, the 35th anniversary of the coup against Allende, was the bloodiest day in the escalating conflict. In the Media Luna department of Pando, a para-military band with machine guns attacked the Indian community of El Porvenir, near the departmental capital of El Cobija, resulting in the death of at least 28 people. In a separate action, three policemen were kidnapped. The Red Ponchos, an official militia reserve unit of Indians loyal to Evo Morales, mobilized its forces to help the indigenous communities organize their self defense.

The next day Morales declared a state of siege in Pando and dispatched the army to move on Cobija and to retake its airport that had been occupied by right wing forces. Army units are also being sent to guard the natural gas oleoducts, one of which had been seized by the UJC, cutting the flow of gas to neighboring Brazil and Argentina. General Luis Trigo Antelo, the commander in chief of the Bolivian Armed Forces declared: “We will not tolerate any more actions by radical groups that are provoking a confrontation among Bolivians, causing pain and suffering and threatening the national security.” In signing the order authorizing the use of force in Pando, Morales stated that he felt responsible for the humiliation of the military and the police by radicals and vandals because he had not authorized them to use their weapons. This was the quid pro quo for getting the military high command to act.

After sustained fighting with at least three dead, the army took control of the airport and moved on the city. An order for the arrest of the prefect of Pando was issued for refusing to recognize the state of siege and for being responsible for the massacre in El Porvenir. In Santa Cruz, the police arrested 8 rioters of the UJC. Peasant organizations have announced they will march on the city to retake control of the government offices. The dissident prefects, led by Costas, are still demanding departmental autonomy and refusing to accept a national vote on the referendum for the new constitution.

Evo Morales refuses to back down, declaring in a meeting with supportive union leaders, “we will launch a campaign to approve the new constitution.” He did, however, indicate he may modify the draft to accommodate some of the demands for autonomy by the prefects. Like Allende, Morales continues to search for a democratic solution to the crisis in his country. For the moment, he has the backing of the Bolivian armed forces along with overwhelming popular support, thereby avoiding the ultimate fate of the Chilean president.

Roger Burbach is Director of the Center for the Study of the Americas (CENSA) based in Berkeley, CA. He has written extensively on Latin America and is the author of “The Pinochet Affair: State Terrorism and Global Justice.

22 Responses to “What’s going on in Bolivia? Let’s get educated.”


  1. 1 Bot September 17, 2008 at 10:16 am

    Allende won with a less-than-resounding 36 percent of the popular vote in 1970; nearly two-thirds of those who went to the polls voted against him. By 1973, he had frittered away even this flimsy base of support. What is even clearer, though, is that he was no democrat once in office. Indeed, Allende set out to destroy his country’s democratic tradition. His government was set on “the Leninist demolition of the ‘bourgeois’ state,” as the former Chilean Communist Roberto Ampuero put it recently in The Washington Post. “[Allende] cast aside our democratic system in order to try to replace it with a system … that had already failed in Eastern Europe, Asia, and in Fidel Castro’s Cuba.”

    Allende ruined the Chilean economy as well. His term opened in 1970 with crowd-pleasing, budget-busting welfare payouts. He nationalized the foreign-owned copper industry, ordered sharp wage increases, and imposed price controls. These measures triggered a consumption binge, and within months Chile had eaten its seed corn of capital. Inflation took over. Imports and consumption collapsed. Unemployment, destitution, and anger followed. By 1973, the economy was “screaming,” as Nixon had hoped it would.

    Is this what’s in store for Bolivia?

  2. 2 theradicalmormon September 17, 2008 at 2:01 pm

    Was it Allende who ruined the Chilean economy or was it the stranglehold that the USA put on Chile via sanctions?

    It seems clear which side of the propaganda you’ve been paying attention to. Remember, the nationalization of the copper-industry was adopted by Pinochet and it was touted as one of his great successes! Your revisionist historical perspective doesn’t pan out under scrutiny. Check here for a good article on the topic:

    Pinochet worked economic magic? Not so fast revisionist historians.

  3. 3 search engine optimisation September 6, 2014 at 1:45 pm

    Howdy! This article couldn’t be written any better!
    Reading through this post reminds me of my previous roommate!
    He constantly kept talking about this. I most certainly will send this post to him.
    Fairly certain he will have a very good read.
    Many thanks for sharing!

  4. 4 UK Models February 28, 2015 at 10:09 am

    Excellent blog post. I definitely appreciate this site.
    Keep writing!

  5. 5 Red Payments March 6, 2015 at 8:41 am

    Thanks for the marvelous posting! I certainly
    enjoyed reading it, you may be a great author.I
    will make sure to bookmark your blog and will eventually come back in the future.
    I want to encourage that you continue your great posts, have a nice morning!

  6. 6 market research October 13, 2015 at 10:44 pm

    Hello mates, its impressive article concerning teachingand entirely defined, keep
    it up all the time.

  7. 7 veteransday quotes October 15, 2015 at 8:02 pm

    I have read so many articles or reviews on the topic of the blogger lovers but this post is
    truly a good paragraph, keep it up.

  8. 8 Mercedes March 1, 2016 at 5:06 pm

    Hello there, You’ve done an incredible job. I’ll definitely digg it and personally suggest to my friends.
    I’m sure they will be benjefited from this site.


  1. 1 energy investments Trackback on October 16, 2014 at 1:12 pm
  2. 2 Imperial Advance Trackback on February 27, 2015 at 8:41 pm
  3. 3 Foundation for Defense of Democracies Trackback on February 27, 2015 at 9:16 pm
  4. 4 Brandon Colker Trackback on March 1, 2015 at 8:28 pm
  5. 5 Eric Gonchar Trackback on March 1, 2015 at 10:15 pm
  6. 6 Freedom Mentor Reviews Trackback on March 2, 2015 at 9:11 am
  7. 7 iPhone Repair South Austin Trackback on March 3, 2015 at 6:30 pm
  8. 8 Karl Jobst Trackback on March 6, 2015 at 4:33 am
  9. 9 GPS Tracking Trackback on March 7, 2015 at 10:18 pm
  10. 10 Saleh Stevens Trackback on March 10, 2015 at 10:41 am
  11. 11 Ian Andrews Fraud Trackback on March 12, 2015 at 5:58 am
  12. 12 referrer Trackback on March 12, 2015 at 10:28 pm
  13. 13 Ian Leaf Trackback on March 13, 2015 at 2:47 am
  14. 14 Grove OK Dentist Trackback on March 13, 2015 at 2:20 pm

Leave a comment




RSS Information Clearinghouse

  • An error has occurred; the feed is probably down. Try again later.
Just Foreign Policy Iraqi Death Estimator
Impeach Cheney