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Entries from July 2009

Evo Morales: A divisive president

July 19, 2009 · Leave a Comment

Came across this article in the Economist. Very interesting…

Evo Morales is a popular president, but his brand of politics is dividing his country

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Reuters

ON THE high plane, the altiplano, surrounding La Paz, where the landscape is drawn in shades of dusty brown, new brick buildings stand out against the bright sky. Most are residences of a couple of storeys, but there are schools and clinics too. Some even boast cement balustrades, a flourish that echoes the Spanish colonial style. In a place where there are still adobe houses, and where a dowry may be measured partly in potatoes freeze-dried by nights spent above 4,000 metres (13,000 feet), this is a transformation.

President Evo Morales’s government has shovelled money towards this part of the country ever since he was elected in 2005. But its time in power has been deeply divisive. Leopoldo Fernández, an opposition politician who is governor of the Pando province in the north, has been in prison for ten months without standing trial. In March Victor Hugo Cárdenas, an Aymara Indian who was once the country’s vice-president, had his house attacked by a mob after opposing a new constitution proposed by the government.

Abroad, Mr Morales’s government has revelled in the worsening of a number of its most important relationships. It expelled the United States’ ambassador, along with his country’s drug-enforcement agents. The accusations of American plots against the government had abated in anticipation of the new Obama administration, but business has now returned to usual, with President Morales expelling another American diplomat and lambasting the United States for refusing to renew a preferential trade agreement that is linked to Bolivia’s performance on combating its drug barons. Bolivia’s relations with Peru are awful and it has failed to convince Brazil to abandon plans for new hydro resources in the Amazon which will lessen its demand for Bolivia’s gas.

In part this drive to isolate the country is deliberate. Many in the government dream of an economic autarky, powered by gas. Yet Mr Morales has accepted help from Venezuela, Cuba, Russia and Iran to further his “Movement to Socialism” (MAS) party. Venezuelan troops helped quell a rebellion centred on the airport at Santa Cruz in the east in 2007.

The antagonism between the government in the Andean city of La Paz and its opponents in Santa Cruz is Bolivia’s clearest fault line. The conflict is usually described as pitting indigenous Bolivians in the uplands against descendants of Spain in the lowlands, or poor versus rich, but in fact Santa Cruz is ethnically mixed and average incomes in the two cities are comparable. Instead, the conflict is one of identity. The cruceños see themselves as pioneers who carved prosperity out of a pestilential jungle. Those who live on the altiplano are likely to view Mr Morales, the country’s first indigenous president, with pride and to think that his government offers them a chance to get their share of revenues from the gasfields around Santa Cruz. By contrast, the cruceño elite fear losing their property, businesses and power.

This fear has increased since April, when government troops burst into the Hotel Las Américas in Santa Cruz, killed three men and arrested two others. The government claimed that this raid prevented an assassination attempt on Mr Morales. The hotel, all brown marble and glass with a few sad ferns in the atrium, seems an unlikely base for a terrorist cell, and the supposed terrorists were an unlikely bunch. That three of them were killed in their beds rather than spared for interrogation has aroused suspicion that they were in effect executed.

Whatever the case, a continuing investigation acts as a useful reminder to would-be rebels that they should stay in line. It has also destroyed any kind of moderate opposition. Carlos Dabdoub Arrien, one of the more constitutionally minded of the government’s opponents in Santa Cruz, describes Mr Morales as an “indigenous fascist”.

Those new brick houses on the altiplano are likely to keep Mr Morales in power in the elections due at the end of the year. He has handsomely increased government spending for the past three years, including much-needed increases in cash-transfer programmes. Some of these were inherited from the previous government, but they have been boosted and renamed. One programme is called “Bolivia changes, Evo delivers”.

Maybe. But at least one pundit, reckoning that the voters are still unlikely to give Mr Morales the landslide he craves in the legislature, says Bolivia is suffering a classic bout of Latin American populism: personalised politics, mild paranoia, bad economic policy and a weak opposition.

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ABC interview new Honduran “president”

July 3, 2009 · Leave a Comment

Jeffrey Kofman from ABC interviewed the new Honduran leader. In this video he shares some of the interview details.

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Alvaro Vargas Llosa on Honduras: CNN Video

July 2, 2009 · Leave a Comment

Excellent interview with Vargas Llosa. His analysis of the geopolitical implications of the Honduras situation is super interesting. The video is in spanish.

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HRF calls on the OAS to suspend Honduras’ antidemocratic government

July 2, 2009 · Leave a Comment

The following is the HRF press release on the Honduran crisis:

The Human Rights Foundation (HRF) has called on OAS Member States to apply the democratic clause and suspend the government of Honduras that forcibly overthrew President Zelaya. Pursuant to the Charter of the OAS and the Inter-American Democratic Charter, the situation in Honduras amounts to a grave alteration or interruption of the democratic order, and it is the duty of the OAS to act, said HRF.

“In application of its own rules, the OAS must undertake every diplomatic measure that may be conducive to the immediate reinstitution of Honduras’ constitutional President”, said Javier El-Hage, General Counsel of the HRF. “But in case these measures do not render prompt results, the OAS must suspend Honduras’ government from participation in all bodies of the OAS.”

According to the Charter of the OAS, “[a] Member of the Organization whose democratically constituted government has been overthrown by force may be suspended from the exercise of the right to participate” in the OAS (Art. 9). Along the same lines, the Inter-American Democratic Charter states that “access to power in accordance with the rule of law” is an essential element of democracy (Art. 3) and that “an unconstitutional interruption of the democratic order or an unconstitutional alteration of the constitutional regime that seriously impairs the democratic order in a member state, constitutes, while it persists, an insurmountable obstacle to its government’s participation” in the OAS (Art. 19).

“It is profoundly antidemocratic to attempt to solve a crisis between the branches of government, by having the chief of the executive power forcibly sent to exile. The unconstitutional actions by President Zelaya must be addressed in absolute respect of his constitutional rights and not through further unconstitutional acts,” said El-Hage. “The armed forces claim to have acted in compliance with a judicial order and under the approval of the legislative power, but Art. 102 of the Honduras Constitution expressly bans the ‘expatriation’ of any Honduran citizen, let alone a democratically elected president that has not been duly prosecuted. Latin-American politicians must once and for all understand that forcibly overthrowing a President, is simply not an option,” he concluded.

As part of its “Mr. Insulza and the Democratic Charter” project, the HRF has already sent five letters to the Secretary General of the OAS criticizing him for failing to apply the democratic clause against the governments of Venezuela, Bolivia, Nicaragua and Ecuador, which have repeatedly and with impunity violated the essential elements of democracy set forth in Art. 3 of the Democratic Charter. HRF has also strongly condemned the recent resolution favoring the government of Cuba’s reincorporation to the OAS, decrying Castro’s appalling human rights record and its failing to comply with any of the essential elements of democracy, as recognized in the Democratic Charter. “The forcible overthrow of a government is not the only fact that must trigger the activation of the democratic clause. Antidemocratic governments, whether self-defined left-wing or right-wing, simply cannot participate in the OAS,” said HRF.

HRF also announced that in the following days it will publish a legal report that thoroughly addresses the conflict of powers that deteriorated into President Zelaya’s forcible overthrow. The purpose of the report will be to individualize those responsible for each of the constitutional violations effected in Honduras, and to recommend actions for Honduras’ branches of government to democratically solve the political gridlock in the country.

HRF is an international nonpartisan organization devoted to defending human rights in the Americas. It centers its work on the twin concepts of freedom of self-determination and freedom from tyranny. These ideals include the belief that all human beings have the rights to speak freely, to associate with those of like mind, and to leave and enter their countries. Individuals in a free society must be accorded equal treatment and due process under law, and must have the opportunity to participate in the governments of their countries; HRF’s ideals likewise find expression in the conviction that all human beings have the right to be free from arbitrary detainment or exile and from interference and coercion in matters of conscience. HRF does not support nor condone violence. HRF’s International Council includes former prisoners of conscience Vladimir Bukovsky, Palden Gyatso, Armando Valladares, Ramón J. Velásquez, Elie Wiesel, and Harry Wu.

Contact: Javier El-Hage, Human Rights Foundation, (212) 246.8486, info@thehrf.org

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