
Bolivia's
Morales faces biggest test
By
Patrick J. McDonnell
LA Times
La
Paz
Petroleumworld.com 12 26 06
Not
yet a year in office, President Evo Morales can boast of some major
accomplishments. He has nationalized the country's oil and gas industry,
overseen sweeping agrarian reform and convened an assembly to rewrite
the constitution.
Polls
show the former llama herder and coca-leaf farmer is maintaining a positive
rating of more than 60% in opinion polls, even as Bolivia has lurched
from one political crisis to another.
Bolivia's first
Indian president has not backed down from his campaign pledge to be
a "nightmare" for Washington, emerging as Venezuelan President
Hugo Chavez's closest ally in the region. With his fiery revolutionary
rhetoric and distinctive jackets crafted of Indian fabrics, Morales
has gained great cachet among the left in Latin America, the United
States and especially Europe.
"An indigenous
government has extraordinary 'sex appeal,' " said Carlos Torsano,
an independent political analyst here. Torsano notes that despite Morales'
focus on what the leader calls Bolivia's indigenous majority, polls
have shown that most Bolivians, like most Latin Americans, consider
themselves mestizo, or mixed-race people.
And, for all the
political adeptness, Morales is now facing his most daunting challenge.
A political insurrection
has enveloped four provinces in Bolivia's east, north and south, a swath
of the country known as the half-moon that contains much of the nation's
wealth, including most of its gas reserves. Political leaders there,
long alienated from Morales' power base in the Andes heartland and the
coca-growing tropics, are pushing for more autonomy.
Their supporters
launched mass demonstrations, civic strikes and legislative action,
culminating in huge protests Dec. 15.
"The road to
autonomy is something that our society has been working toward for a
long time, with mobilizations, protests and votes," said Germán
Antelo, president of the Civic Committee of Santa Cruz, the thriving
eastern lowland city that is the heart of the autonomy movement. "We're
not looking to break away from Bolivia. We just want respect for popular
will that seeks autonomy."
What autonomy would
mean in practice is unclear, although it probably would include local
governments receiving a larger share of taxes and royalties from their
natural gas. This is not a small thing at a time when gas revenue is
expected to increase by billions of dollars thanks to new contracts
negotiated with foreign energy companies under Morales' nationalization
scheme.
The president has
signaled that he regards talk of autonomy as the first step toward breaking
up the country, South America's poorest. He derides the autonomy movement
as the elite's response to his leftist reforms.
"The fatherland
cannot be divided," Morales declared during a ceremony at the Army
Military college here this month. But he softened his tone after Dec.
15, saying the pro-autonomy movement had modified its goals. "They
no longer advocate division, separation," Morales said.
The tension surrounding
autonomy has escalated as Bolivia and Venezuela approved a military
assistance pact in November that has troubled Morales critics and U.S.
diplomats.
"If, for some
reason, the brotherly revolution in Bolivia was threatened, and our
blood was solicited, we would be here," Julio Montes, Venezuela's
ambassador and a major behind-the-scenes player here, recently told
a gathering of peasants in the Chapare, Morales' home base.
The ambassador's
comments ignited a firestorm among autonomy supporters, fierce critics
of the Bolivia-Venezuela alliance.
"We know that
there are Venezuelan advisors in many areas of the government, and this
pact opens the possibility of any kind of intervention," opposition
Sen. Oscar Ortiz told reporters.
Morales supporters
have pushed back. "We will defend with blood the unity of the country,"
Nazario Ramirez, a proMorales leader in the La Paz suburb of El Alto
said.
Morales has spoken
of his own plan for autonomy for indigenous people without specifying
exactly what that means.
The autonomy issue
has become entwined with the controversy swirling around the rewriting
of the constitution.
In July, residents
of Santa Cruz, Tarija, Pando and Beni, the four half-moon states, voted
for greater autonomy in a referendum held the same day a 225-member
assembly was chosen to craft a new constitution.
Rewriting the constitution
is widely seen here as a means for Morales to implement far-ranging
reforms and consolidate his power, much as Venezuela's Chavez used such
a convention to cement his hold on the government.
-
Patrick
J. McDonnell, LA Times Staff Writer
December 25, 2006
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