
Bolivian
states inch closer to self-rule as Morales urges talks
LA PAZ
Petroleumworld.com
12 25 07
Four of Bolivia's richest departments Monday said
they will put their autonomy hopes to referendum votes, as President Evo Morales
called for talks with the country's nine governors in a bid to defuse rising
tensions.
The energy-rich eastern departments of Santa Cruz, Tarija, Beni and Pando announced
signature drives to get the legal quorum of 8.0 percent of their local populations
behind referendums to approve their quest for greater autonomy, officially declared
by state officials on Saturday.
The governors of Cochabamba and Chuquisaca have also announced similar aspirations,
as Bolivia's three remaining western departments -- La Paz, Oruro and Potosi
-- stand firmly behind Morales in the biggest challenge yet to his socialist
reform movement.
Morales, the country's first indigenous president, has alienated the country's
rich lowland regions, who populations are largely ethnically European and mixed,
by pushing his plan to redistribute the country's wealth to the poor natives
in the mountains.
Tension came to a head earlier this month when an assembly run by Morales supporters
approved a draft constitution giving him greater powers and enshrining his pro-poor
agenda.
Both the draft constitution and the autonomy statutes declared by the four departments
will have to be put to referendums before they can be validated.
Morales on Sunday called for a dialogue with the recalcitrant governors in hopes
of defusing the unrest, a day after massive pro- and anti-government demonstrations
took place around the country sparked by the regional autonomy moves.
Morales has accused the autonomy supporters of wanting to split the country
and has warned that "the armed forces ... are here to make sure that the
country never disintegrates."
On Monday, Morales called the nine governors to La Paz on Wednesday for talks
in the presence of European Union ambassadors and possibly Organization of American
States representatives.
The talks were arranged by EU diplomats, whose mediation Morales invoked last
week in hopes of bringing the two sides together.
The secretary general of the La Paz state government, Alejandro Zapata, said
Netherlands Ambassador, Martin de la Bey, would act as mediator between Morales
and the pro-autonomy governors.
So far, only La Paz and Cochabamba have agreed to the talks, officials said.
Meanwhile on Monday Morales ended meetings with Brazilian President, Luiz Inacio
Lula da Silva, after they signed a 750-million-dollar agreement for the joint
exploitation of Bolivia's gas and crude oil resources by state-run oil companies
Petrobras (Brazil) and YPFB (Bolivia).
Most of the natural resources are located in Bolivia's richer lowland departments.
Morales on Sunday also signed with Lula and visiting Chilean President Michelle
Bachelet an agreement to build South America's first east-west highway, linking
Brazil's Atlantic coast to Chile's Pacific coast via Bolivia.
The massive 4,700-kilometer (2,900-mile) project is expected to be finished in
2009 and, according to Lula, will benefit the three nations by speeding up trade
between them and with the rest of the world.
Story
from
AFP
AFP
18 0144 GMT 12 07
Copyright© 2007 Petroleumworld. All rights reserved.
Send
this story to a friend
Your
feedback is important to us!
We invite all our readers to share with us
their views and comments about this article.
Write
to editor@petroleumworld.com
Any
question or suggestions, please write to:
editor@petroleumworld.com
Best
Viewed with IE
5.01+
Windows
NT 4.0, '95, '98 and ME +/ 800x600 pixels