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Bolivia: When minorities deny the rights of the majorities
By Miguel Lora Fuentes, Bolpress (translation by David Montoute)
How true it is that nothing lasts forever. Bolivia’s exploited classes, of mainly indigenous origin, are now confronting more than five centuries of exclusion. This territory’s original inhabitants were subjugated by the cross and the sword during the colonial period, they were harassed and had their lands taken from them under the Republic, and their culture was ignored during the bourgeois-democratic revolution of 1952. Now, as they finally take state power by democratic means at the beginning of the 21st century, the dominant minority accuses them of wanting to install the ``first racist, fascist state in Latin America’’.
The current historical juncture is characterised by a profound crisis of the market economy, of liberal democracy and of the very foundations of the old republican colonial state, a monocultural, centralist and exclusionary state that has remained intact since the foundation of the Republic.
The
current historical moment opened by the indigenous and working-class movements resembles
the period between the 1940s and 1950s in which a struggle for power between
the ``rosca’’ [oligarchy] and the popular movement marked the prelude to the
nationalist revolution of 1952.
What
is new is that the indigenous peoples are now the challengers of the old
colonial state –which was both subordinated to foreign powers and the architect
of today’s racialised class-society. Determined to liberate themselves from
their accursed colonial heritage, the historically excluded sectors, who were
never recognised as subjects with political rights, are changing the course of
the state and attempting to consolidate cultural, socioeconomic and institutional
reforms in the country.
The
exercise of politics has been ``deprivatised’’. Previously it was in the hands
of the systemic parties, whereas now the masses have burst onto the scene,
appropriating the bourgeois democracy and the normative judicial apparatus
which has historically subordinated them. Vice-President Alvaro García Linera
defines this juncture in ``Leninist’’ terms: ``It is the moment of the masses …
In the minds of the exploited classes, a different vision of
the state has crystallised, and a
From
the beginning of this century a ``new plural and social subject’’ is under
construction, and it demands a new national project. It has broken with the
old, colonial, republican state and assumed the historical challenge of
collectively building the new
Without
moving an inch beyond the conservative boundaries of the exhausted neoliberal
paradigm, the most reactionary political and business interests have rejected
the democratic battle of ideas and called for fascist tactics to block the
transformations promoted by the immense majorities.
Minorities
entrenched in the region of the ``half moon’’, deceived by the agro-industrial,
land-owning commercial elite and linked to multinationals, openly violate the
democratic rules of the game. They denigrate institutional rule, practice the
crime of sedition, openly call for disobedience and organise de facto
mini-republics that are independent of central authority.
In
search of pluralism
The
right wing understands the background of the current program of transformation
as the ``domination of one group by another’’. It sees the ``closing-down’’ of
political, economic and cultural freedoms, the construction of a ``racist state’’
with the ``constitutionalisation’’ of the term ``native indigenous campesinos’’
. According to the Podemos parliamentarian Walter Javier Arrázola Mendivil,
this term has no sociological or historical foundation and shatters the
universal principle of ``citizenship’’.
The
conservative political sectors see only the descendents of the pre-conquest
peoples and nations being recognised by the new political constitution of the state,
while other social identities built in the last 500 years, such as the mestizos
[mixed Spanish/indigenous heritage] are denied any value.
The
right says that the new Magna Carta ``creates first and second-class citizens’’
and ignores ``mestizaje’’ [the ``mixed race’’]. In this way, ``being
indigenous’’ becomes a means of social and economic advancement and a kind of
``cultural and economic [reprisal]’.
But
is this really the case?
The
prelude to the Magna Carta approved at the end of 2007 describes the existence
of a wide diversity of cultures in our national territory. These cultures had
no experience of racism until the advent of colonial rule.
Now,
the Bolivian people propose the building of a new, truly pluralist state,
inspired by the memory of its martyrs and its past social and indigenous
struggles. The indigenous worker-campesino majorities are carrying out a
bourgeois democratic revolution. They don’t seek to wipe out the conservative
political minorities, but rather demand respect and equality for all.
The
only goal of the indigenous emergence, says García Linera, is equality – nothing
more, nothing less. That is why its premise is the construction of a state that
is respectful of political, economic, juridical, cultural and linguistic
pluralism. Above all, it must promote the ``intercivilisational complementarity
of the Bolivian people in all their diversity’’, living together, and with
universal access to water, work, education, health and housing.
However,
the new political constitution of the state seeks to establish the foundations
of a new ``pluralistic society’’ from the political, economic, judicial and
cultural perspective, and transcend the postulates of economic liberalism and
representative democracy.
To
this end, the indigenous worldview for the first time ever becomes a substantial
part of the plurinational state’s identity. Now, communitarian institutions are
recognised as an inherent part of the state’s forms of economic, political and
cultural organisation.[1]
For
the conservative right-wing, the constitution’s recognition of the pre-colonial
indigenous nations and peoples is excessive. It considers this recognition a
disproportionate benefit from the plurinational state, as with the
institutional representation of the state or the autonomous indigenous territories
and their sovereign control of renewable and non-renewable resources.
It
is inconceivable for them that the native, indigenous campesinos should have direct
representation with their ``practices and customs’’, 50% representation in
Congress and other state organisms/institutions such as the Constitutional
Tribunal, the Agro-ecological Tribunal and the Plurinational Electoral Council.
But the only thing the constitution really does is recognise the free will and
self-determination of these peoples, in accordance with Agreement 169 of the International
Labour Organisation (ILO) and the UN Declaration on Indigenous Peoples ratified by
the majority of the world’s countries on the September 13, 2007.[2]
`Mestizos’ vs. indigenous peoples
The
Right minimises the importance of indigenous demographics in
According
to parliamentary representative Arrázola, there are only two numerous
indigenous groups in
What
is certain is that the national majority identifies with one or another of the
country’s 37 ethnic groups, some of which extend beyond national boundaries. To
the 1.3 million Aymaras who inhabit
A `Marxist-Stalinist’ state?
The
conservative political sectors see the MAS program’s use of the term ``indigenous’’
as an ideological prop of a ``Marxist-Stalinist’’ state – one that substitutes
ethnic struggles for the class struggle. While the official constitution
guarantees the protection of private property, the centralised ``state
capitalism’’ of a planned economy will, in their opinion, lead to a gradual
elimination of private property.
The
fact is that Morales’ government negotiated new contracts with the oil
companies which guaranteed their holdings, their investments and their profits.
It provided strong guarantees for private property and investment in accordance
with the law, while the new constitution essentially proposes that the old
elites share power with the emerging indigenous elites.
The
economy envisioned by the new pluralist state expressly states that the
communitarian, state, private and social-cooperative forms of economic organisation
``are equal before the law’’ and are articulated on the principles of complementarity,
reciprocity, solidarity, redistribution, equality, sustainability, balance,
justice and transparency.
The
four axes of the new pluricultural state under construction are:
1.
The state as protagonist in the economy and responsible for the equitable redistribution
of the national wealth;
2.
Equality between
3.
The right of the indigenous peoples to take decisions at a state level; and
4.
The autonomous national state.
One
of the objectives of the changes is the reconstitution of the indigenous
communities –facilitating the autonomous development of their collective
culture. Its starting point is an acknowledgement of the current unequal land
distribution. The west covers a third of the national territory and is home to
almost two-thirds of the population, while the east, which covers two-thirds of
the country, is home to little more than a third of the population.
The
right claims that the MAS will take advantage of the native, campesino
concept to redistribute eastern territories. In this way, the inhabitants of
the west can ``conquer’’, ``neo-colonise’’ and promote a process of ``acculturisation’’
of the lowland inhabitants who historically, culturally and sociologically
built ``mestizo identities’’.
A single national project and regional resistance
The
conservative political sectors define the current juncture as a struggle
between two distinct visions of two distinct and different countries. But in practice,
the minority provincial classes lack a concrete program, as in 1952, and are
simply opposing the new political and economic project that is dominated by the
national majorities.
Small
clans permanently linked to political power, and co-governing with the military
dictatorships and neoliberal regimes, were cornered by a popular insurrection
in 2003. After 20 years of ``democracy’’, this is the first government in which
these groups are not directly administering the state apparatus.
The
land has become a strong and cohesive rallying point for the national
oligarchy. A report by the United Nations Development Program (UNDP) reveals
that approximately 100 feudal-style families own five times more land (25
million hectares) than 2 million campesinos (five million hectares) condemned
to scratching a living from eroded and over-exploited mini-estates. On average,
a landowning family in
The
concentration of land is most notorious in the department of
The
clan is powerful because in addition to land, it also owns rivers, forests,
haciendas and even the very lives of its labourers. It controls the agro-industrial
sector, foreign trade, the banks and the communications media of
Seeing
their interests threatened by a new constitution that restricts individual landholdings
to a maximum of 5000 to 10,000 hectares, the ruling classes openly conspire
against the government and try to set up autonomous mini-republics. These have
their own parliament and police forces, and total control over land, taxes and
the region’s natural resources.
The
conservative minorities recovered their influence by championing autonomy and
fighting centralism, which according to them is responsible for all the
nation’s ills. ``Bolivian and indigenous poverty, above all in the west of the
country, is a result of state centralism and the concentration of decision making
in the government of
Businesspeople,
traditional party politicians and various middle-class professionals make up a
solid anti-popular bloc capable of mobilising great numbers of people. They
have the firm support of the pro-Santa Cruz Civic Committee and the bourgeoisie
as a whole: the Eastern Chamber of Forests and Fisheries (CAO), the Santa Cruz
Chamber of Industry, Trade, Services and Tourism (Cainco), the Businessmen’s
Federation and the Santa Cruz Cattle Ranching Federation (Fegasacruz).
The
circumstantial leader of the clan is Branco Marinkovic, president of the Santa
Cruz Civic Committee, who together with Governor Costas, is the visible leader
of the secessionist movement. On December 6, 2007, Marinkovic sent a letter to
President Morales to inform him that he was taking up a struggle ``for
democracy and freedom against dictatorship’’, stating that Santa Cruz autonomy move
has no political motives and no individual’s personal interests behind it. This
is despite the fact that he could be the principal estate-holder to suffer from
the Agrarian Reform’s Communitarian Recovery Law.[4]
The
The
rebellion of big business in the four departments has made it clear that
Bolivian society has yet to overcome the defects of the past. In recent months,
peasants and indigenous people have been denigrated, insulted, spat at and
beaten on the streets of
It’s
as if we had regressed decades in a matter of months. All of a sudden, small
white and mestizo groups are reincorporating discriminatory and racist
expressions into their vocabulary, things we believed dead and buried. In
The clans' political hegemony is broken
The
political crisis generated by society’s most conservative sectors has
apparently stalled the country’s transformation, but it has simultaneously
radicalised the position of the popular movements. On
President
Morales’ priority in his third year of governance is to accelerate the program
of structural transformation and the ``decolonisation’’ of the state with the
help of a new National Coordinating Committee for Change. One of its first
measures is the recovery and expropriation the holdings of landowners enslaving
the
The
process of decolonisation is irreversible. This is not a political speech, but
a painful reality which must be approached with boldness. And, as Morales says,
the only way to transform the state is to close the deep wound which
colonialism left in
The
government says it has fulfilled the basic program of the 2005 electoral
campaign, such as the nationalisation of oil and gas, and the establishment of
a constituent assembly. It now tries to incorporate the philosophical
principles of the indigenous community into the new state, meaning the equal
redistribution of natural wealth and resources, and a collective ``living
standard’’ that does not depend upon anyone’s exploitation.
The
aim of the plurinational state under construction is the search for a decent
standard of living – one with sovereignty, dignity, complementarity,
solidarity, harmony and equality in the distribution and redistribution of the
social product. The new Magna Carta questions neoliberalism from a
communitarian perspective, privileging equality over freedom and collective
rights over individual rights.
According
to many analysts,
The
Bolivian state has recognised indigenous societies as alternative societal
models, distinct from capitalism, the market and Western society. On the
international scene it holds up this other kind of conviviality, superior to
the Western individualism that has unleashed the environmental crisis.
The Bolivian social movements are building a more civilised human model, austere and respectful of nature, with the invaluable contribution of the ancestral knowledge and practices of indigenous peoples. They are creating a collective subject that does not jettison individual creativity and private freedoms, but does privilege the individual’s intersubjective dimension and his essentially communal identity.
Notes
[1]
``SECTION III: CULTURES. Article 99:
[2]
After 24 years of debate, the United Nations approved the Declaration on the
Rights of the Indigenous Peoples, which recognised the right to
self-determination, possession of land, access to natural resources and the
preservation of the traditional knowledge and culture of the world’s 370
million indigenous people. As victims of historic injustice, the colonisation
and usurpation of their lands, territories and resources has prevented them
from exercising their right to development in accordance with their own needs
and interests. Now these indigenous peoples are free from discrimination,
according to the preamble of the historic declaration. The declaration also
condemns doctrines, policies and practices based on the superiority of
particular peoples or persons for any national, racial, religious, ethnic or
cultural reasons. These are, it says, ``racist, scientifically false, judicially
invalid, morally abhorrent and socially unjust’’.
[3]
Three years ago, the INRA estimated that the Cruceño provinces of Guarayos,
Chiquitos and Cordillera had 800,000 hectares of recoverable land in the hands
of 500 individuals. No small number of former ministers and legislators abused
their power to monopolise land. Former Senate president Sandro Giordano and his
wife, and the family of Luis Fernando Saavedra Bruno, are notable
examples.
[4]
Notables in the right-wing power bloc are Oscar Ortiz, former manager of Cainco
and now a senator for Podemos, the offshoot of the fascist ADN of ex-dictator
Hugo Banzer; ex-president of Fegasacruz Antonio Franco (a rancher and current
Podemos legislator who demanded the jailing of NGOs that help indigenous
people); and Branco Marinkovic, ex-president of the Businessmen’s Federation
and now president of the Santa Cruz Civic Committee. In the civil section of
the autonomist front, the former president of the Civic Committee Rubén Costas
stands out. Today he is the department’s governor. The former parliamentarian
and health minister Carlos Dabdoub is one of the movement’s ideologues and
currently the autonomy secretary for the
[5]
There are still about a thousand landless Guarani families, with neither a
salary nor basic rights. As unbelievable as it sounds, the boss’ permission is
required to even speak to them.
Original article at http://www.bolpress.com/art.php?Cod=2008050307



Comments
Rise of Food Fascism: Agrarian Elite Foments Coup in Bolivia
The Rise of Food Fascism: Allied to Global Agribusiness, Agrarian Elite Foments Coup in Bolivia
(http://boliviarising.blogspot.com/2008/06/rise-of-food-fascism-allied-to...)
Roger Burbach
Like many third world countries Bolivia is experiencing food shortages and rising food prices attributable to a global food marketing system driven by multinational agribusiness corporations. With sixty percent of the Bolivian population living in poverty and thirty-three percent in extreme poverty, the price of the basic food canasta--including wheat, rice, corn, soy oil and potatoes, as well as meat—has risen twenty-five percent over the past year with prices gyrating wildly in the local markets.
As in most other countries affected by the food crisis, the overall rise in food prices is attributable to the workings of the free market—when the price of one or several commodities goes up, the consumers turn to other food stuffs, thereby driving up these prices as well. In an effort to halt the effects of this unregulated market, the government has enacted price controls and even prohibited the export of beef, most of which is produced on haciendas. But these measures have been largely ineffective: A black market flourishes as agrarian commercial interests openly flaunt the central government’s price controls, even directly exporting commodities like beef and cooking oil at higher prices to the neighboring countries of Chile and Peru.
This is taking place as Bolivia’s first Indian president, Evo Morales, is facing a sustained challenge by a right wing movement for autonomy that is integrally linked to the very agribusiness corporations that are profiting from the upsurge in food prices. Based in the eastern province of Santa Cruz, a powerful agrarian bourgeoisie is determined to upend the government’s agrarian reform program and to halt Morales’ efforts to more equitably distribute the wealth that flows from Bolivia’s oil and gas fields. Its ultimate goal is to topple Morales and the Movement Towards Socialism (MAS) that backs him.
The corporate dominated agro-industrial complex in Santa Cruz is centered on the growing, processing and export of soy beans. Two of the world’s largest agribusiness multinationals, ADM and Cargill, play a major role in the regional economy. They are primarily exporters of Bolivian soybeans and sunflower seeds while ADM co-owns with a Bolivian firm the largest vegetable oil processing plant, Sociedad Aceitera del Oriente. (1) Giant agribusiness corporations like John Deere have commercial outlets in Santa Cruz as Bolivia manufactures no heavy agricultural machinery. Multinational companies supply most of Bolivia’s agrichemicals, while Monsanto and Calgene are promoting genetically modified seeds. Peruvian and Colombian agribusiness interests have also set up processing plants in Santa Cruz, including the Romero Company from Peru which has joint international operations with Cargill, while large soy growers from the neighboring Brazilian state of Mato Grosso have settled on Bolivian lands.
The agrarian bourgeoisie of Santa Cruz is orchestrating the movement for provincial autonomy in order to seize control of the region’s extensive resources from the national government. The referendum on autonomy that was unconstitutionally voted on and approved in Santa Cruz on May 4, 2008 would allow the provincial administration to write its own contracts with multinationals and to exercise direct control over the police and law enforcement agencies. Autonomy would also enable the province to override national legislation promoted by Morales and MAS on agrarian reform and the control of public forests and subsoil rights, including natural gas and oil.
The economic policies favoring the rise and consolidation of the agrarian bourgeoisie allied to global agribusiness took shape in the mid-1980s when the International Monetary Fund stepped in with a structural adjustment program. Hyper-inflation had gripped the country from 1983-85 and in exchange for the refinancing of Bolivia’s public and international debt the government agreed to a series of “market reforms,” including the reduction of tariffs and the slashing of state subsidies and assistance for the growing of basic food commodities. (2)
These measures overturned the strong role the state had come to play in the economy with the Bolivian revolution of 1952. Along with the nationalization of the tin mines, the worker and peasant backed revolution led to an agrarian reform that broke up the hacienda system in the Andean highlands which had bound much of the Indian population to the land in virtual servitude. With the takeover of the large estates by peasants, rural unions and Indian communities, the production and marketing of basic food stuffs increased, particularly in the 1950s and early 60s. (3)
But another agrarian dynamic began to take shape in the eastern part of the country during these years. Bolivia has three main geographical zones; the Andean highlands or plateau in the west where the agrarian reform was concentrated; the valleys located more in the center and to the south; and the plains or low lands that extend into the more humid and tropical regions in the east.
In the 1960s and 70s, a new landed class emerged in the low lands centered in the province of Santa Cruz. Seizing control of large swaths of the plains and rain forests, often illegally or through government concessions acquired through bribes, the new landed barons raised sugar cane and cotton while plundering the rain forests for lumber. The reactionary character of this region was manifested early on when General Hugo Banzer from Santa Cruz overthrew a leftist general backed by a popular assembly in 1971, ruling the country with an iron hand for seven years, much like the military regimes in other countries in the Southern cone that took power in the 1970s. (4)
The IMF reforms of 1985 privileged the role of Santa Cruz vis-à-vis other parts of the country. With the privatization and closure of many of the state tin mines in the Andean highlands, tens of thousands of miners were thrown out of work. Many migrated to the Chapare region in the south-central part of the country, becoming coca farmers, while others went to the east to squat on small patches of land and serve as an agrarian labor force for the large estates that were favored with credits and infrastructure loans backed by the World Bank. Then in the 1990s vast tracts of land were turned over to the cultivation of soybeans and by the turn of the century Bolivia’s export revenue from soy production was second in importance only to that of the natural gas and oil fields.
The rise of this agribusiness complex has plundered the natural resources of eastern Bolivia. As the frontier for soybeans advances further into the rainforests, the older depleted lands are either abandoned or turned into extensive cattle grazing pastures. Given the highly mechanized nature of soy farming, there are few employment opportunities in the countryside for either the local indigenous population or for those who migrate from the Andes searching for work. As Miguel Urioste, the director of the Land Foundation in La Paz explains: “This mono export model—promoted actively by the World Bank for 15 years—is a lamentable demonstration of how, those that decide public policies…in the third world, do not take into account the enormous environmental costs or the lamentable economic and political effects produced by this model. The monocultivation of soy has concentrated land in a few hands, it has transnationalized property rights, it has impeded new humanely planned settlements and concentrated thousands of poor peasants without lands to generate wealth, employment and well being.” (5)
While Bolivia ranks among the world’s ten top soy exporters, the production of domestic food stuffs by the peasantry has stagnated or declined and the urban population has come to rely more and more on imported grains. Today Bolivia imports sixty-nine percent of its wheat, forty-five percent of its rice, and forty-two percent of its corn. (6) In 2004, even the World Bank was compelled to admit: 'the rural economy is increasingly polarised between the small peasant sector producing foodstuffs, on the one hand, and the agro-enterprise sector producing cash crops for export, on the other’. (7)
The Civic Committee of Santa Cruz, a business organization lead by agribusiness interests, is at the center of the drive for provincial autonomy. According to Bret Gustafson, an analyst of the Santa Cruz elite and its political and cultural institutions: “The Civic Committee is an unelected entity dominated by business and agro-industrial elites who have a long history of resisting control of, and demanding subsidization by, the central government. Typical business members include the private chamber of commerce, the cattlemen, the agro-livestock chamber, the industrialists, the forestry chamber, the soy-producers chamber, and professional organizations (doctors, lawyers, architects). Other “civic”members include representatives of provincial civic committees, of carnival comparsas, and of social clubs or “fraternities.” (8)
Branko Marinkovic, the powerful head of the Civic Committee whose parents migrated to Bolivia from Croatia in the 1950s, is the largest landowner in the country with 300,000 hectares, much of it obtained for pennies or fraudulent maneuvers under past dictatorial and oligarchic governments. (9) He also has considerable business investments, including IOL S.A., one of Bolivia’s largest soy and sunflower processing plants. A political ideologue of the autonomy movement, Marinkovic funds and sits on the board of the think tank Fundacion Libertad y Democracia that has ties to the Heritage and Cato Foundations. (10)
The Cruceño Youth Union (UJC), a junior men’s organization affiliated with the Civic Committee, is the strong arm of the Civic Committee, often acting as shock troops for the autonomy movement. During the plebiscite in May its members, mainly in their teens and early twenties, roamed the streets of the city of Santa Cruz and surrounding towns violently attacking and repressing any opposition to the referendum by local indigenous movements and MAS-allied forces. Not wanting to provoke a violent confrontation, Evo Morales did not deploy the army or use the local police, leaving the urban areas under the effective control of the UJC when the voting took place.
The other less densely inhabited provinces in the east that make up what is called the Media Luna—Pando, Beni and Tarija--have held referendums calling for autonomy under similar conditions. On the national level, the major political party of the right, Podemos (We Can) tied up the efforts of a popularly elected Constituent Assembly to draft a new constitution for over a year and it is now maneuvering with other political forces in La Paz to block a national referendum to enact the constitution.
Simultaneously, the right wing lead by the Civic Committee is 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 business elites and allied truckers engage in “strikes,” withholding or refusing to ship produce to the urban markets while selling commodities in the black market at high prices that cause alarm among the poor. The national Confederation of Private Businesses of Bolivia is calling for a national producers’ shutdown if the government “does not change its economic policies.” (11)
The social movements allied with the government are mobilizing against the right wing. In the Media Luna a union coalition of indigenous peoples and peasants has campaigned against voting in the autonomy referendums and taken on the bands of the UJC as they try to intimidate and terrorize people. In the Andean highlands, the social movements have descended on La Paz in demonstrations backing the government, including a large mobilization on June 10 that stormed the American embassy because of its support for the right wing, particularly over the US refusal to extradite a past president who ordered the shooting of demonstrators in the streets in 2003. Because of this growing unrest, the country is awash with rumors of a coup, and Morales went to a summit in Caracas in mid-June with Hugo Chavez, Daniel Ortega of Nicaragua and Carlos Lage, vice president of Cuba, to discuss how to defend his government.
The ability of the agrarian interests of Bolivia to take the country to the brink of civil war is reflective of the powerful agrarian bourgeoisies that have arisen in many countries of the third world in tandem with global agribusiness. When national governments attempt to control the steep increase in food prices, or popular movements agitate for agrarian reform and food sovereignty, they encounter powerful internal agro-industrial interests, in effect a fifth column nurtured and developed by the multinational corporations in conjunction with the World Bank and the IMF.
This new configuration of power is particularly manifest in South America. In Argentina when President Christina Fernandez de Kirchner tried to levy an export tax on soybeans, the large growers orchestrated a rebellion that has tied up the country’s exports and food marketing system for over three months. In neighboring Brazil, the agrarian bourgeoisie is perhaps the strongest and most entrenched in the Global South. Over the years it has fought a running war with the Landless Movement, violently repressing the efforts of the poor to peacefully occupy and till idle lands. In October last year at the genetically modified seed experimental station of Syngenta (the world’s largest agrichemical corporation) five peaceful demonstrators were shot and one killed: The NT Security company that carried out the attack has close ties to the Rural Society, a right wing growers association known for repeated acts of violence against the Landless Movement. (12)
Some argue that that we are witnessing the rise of “petro-fascism” as multinational corporations and nation states struggle for control of the life-blood of the global economy. (13) Now with the efforts of the multinational agribusiness corporations and the agrarian bourgeoisies to control the very sustenance of human life we may be facing an even more violent period of repression, conflict and upheaval.
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 US foreign policy. His first book, co-authored with Patricia Flynn, was “Agribusiness in the Americas.” See www.globalalternatives.org for CENSA activities and publications.
Special thanks to Isabella Kenfield for her editorial assistance.
End Notes
1. Ximena Soruco (Coordinador) Wilfredo Plata and Gustavo Medeiros, Los Barones del Oriente: El Poder en Santa Cruz Ayer y Hoy, Fundacion Tierra, Observatorio de la Revolución Agraria en Bolivia, La Paz, Bolivia, pp. 206-12. www.ftierra.org
2. For a description of how the IMF and the World Bank imposed these structural adjustment programs on other countries in the Global South, see Walden Bello, “Manufacturing a Food Crisis,” The Nation, June 2, 2008.
3. Cristóbal Kay and Miguel Urioste, “Bolivia's Unfinished Agrarian Reform: Rural Poverty and Development Policies, ISS/UNDP Land, Poverty and Public Action, Policy Paper No. 3, Institute of Social Studies, The Hague, Netherlands and United Nations Development Program, New York, NY, October, 2005, p. 11-13.
4. Forrest Hylton and Sinclair Thomson, Revolutionary Horizons: Popular Struggle in Bolivia, Verso Press, London, 2007, pp. 85-6.
5. Miguel Urioste, “El Banco Mundial Promovio los Moncultivos en Bolivia Durante 15 Anos, Fundacion Tierra, May, 2008, http://ftierra.org/sitio/index.php?option=com_content&task=view&id=159&I...
6. Marcos Nordren Ballivian, “El Precio de los Alimientos,” Foros del Banco Tematico, June 11, 2008. http://www.bancotematico.org/smf/index.php?topic=68.0)
7. Kay and Urisote, p. 15.
8. Bret Gustafson, “Spectacles of Autonomy and Crisis: Or, What Bulls and Beauty Queens have to do with Regionalism in Eastern Bolivia,” Journal of Latin American Anthropology, Vol. 11, No. 2, 2006, p. 363.
9. BolPress, “Movilización para Aplastar la Conspiración Oligárquico-Imperialista en Bolivia,” Unidad de Promoción Indigena y Campesina, Boletin N. 45, 20 de Mayo, 2008, http://www.bolpress.com/art.php?Cod=2008050812
10. Bret Gustafson, “By Means Legal and Otherwise: The Bolivian Right Regroups,” NACLA Report on the Americas, January/February, 2008, p. 25. http://nacla.org/naclareport
11. La Prensa, “La CEPB Amenaza con Paro y el Gobierno Percibe Complot,” La Paz, June 21, 2008.
12. Isabella Kenfeld and Roger Burbach, “Corporate Murder in Brazil: Landless Rural Worker Shot by Security Company Hired by Multinational Syngenta,” Strategic Studies, Global Alternatives, October, 2007. http://globalalternatives.org/node/80
13. See Michael T. Klare, “Behold the Rise of Energy-Based Fascism,” Tomdispatch.com, January 20, 2007, http://www.alternet.org/story/46838
Posted by Bolivia Rising on Monday, June 30, 2008
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