[NYTr] Class war threatens Bolivia over Morales Reforms Date: Tue, 11 Sep 2007 12:51:43 -0500 (CDT) Via NY Transfer News Collective * All the News that Doesn't Fit ["Class war?" or the USA and its corporations? -NYTr] The Guardian - Sep 11, 2007 via rick kissell http://www.guardian.co.uk Class war threatens Bolivia over Morales reforms -Farmers rally to back presidential programme -Leadership blames clashes on US interference by Lola Almudevar in Sucre Thousands of poor farmers and indigenous activists marched through the Bolivian city of Sucre yesterday to support the embattled government's attempt to rewrite the constitution. The demonstrators vowed to defend President Evo Morales's "democratic revolution", a radical effort to empower previously marginalised groups which is shaking South America's poorest country. Mr Morales, a former coca farmer, wants to redress Bolivia's colonial legacy in a new charter drafted by a constituent assembly. For his indigenous supporters, who form 60% of the population, the assembly is a long overdue assertion of their power and rights. "For the first time the political constitution will recognise our existence as indigenous people. Until now we have not had rights, that is why this fight is important," said Wilber Flores, an MP and indigenous leader. However, the initiative risks foundering because of opposition from students and the middle class, many of them descendants of European settlers. They accuse Mr Morales of polarising the country and excluding the relatively wealthy eastern lowlands from power. In recent weeks the government's opponents waged street battles with police in Sucre. Famed for its elegant white buildings, the city was engulfed by black smoke and teargas after students tried to storm the building where the assembly meets. About 60 protesters were injured, roads were blockaded and the assembly suspended for a month amid concerns over safety. With a December deadline for the draft constitution, Mr Morales fears the assembly could be derailed. Yesterday's rally was an attempt by the president's supporters, many wearing the traditional colourful dress of highland dwellers, to reclaim Sucre's streets and wrest back the initiative. "We have a president, but we do not have the power. The rich elite continue to control us. They are never going to accept the changes we want," said Silvano Paillo, an assembly member for Mr Morales's Movement Towards Socialism. Mr Morales and his mentor, the Venezuelan president, Hugo ChC!vez, believe the protesters are part of a US-backed attempt to sabotage the "democratic revolution" they are pursuing. Behind his opponents is "the hand of the empire of the United States, the hand of the imperialist government of George Bush", Mr ChC!vez said on meeting Mr Morales in Venezuela on Saturday. The fight over the constitution has been sidetracked into a bitter battle over which city should host the legislative and executive seats of government. Sucre, near the geographic centre, was the colonial capital but lost its preeminent position to La Paz in a 19th century civil war. Today Sucre is an opposition hotbed and has deployed that historic grievance against Mr Morales by mobilising big rallies to demand the city is once again made the capital. Moving the capital from La Paz, a Morales bastion, would clip the president's wings. Last month, under pressure from Mr Morales, the assembly passed a resolution removing the issue from their deliberations. That decision, which is being challenged in the courts, led to accusations of authoritarianism. "Evo Morales cannot impose his might," said Edgar Arraya, an opposition assembly member. "We are in a constitutional state and he has to respect the law or the people will rise up against him." In a city where students once rose up against Spanish colonial rule, that is no idle threat. Yesterday belonged to the president's supporters but the opposition will return to the streets if necessary, Antonio Jesus, a student leader, said. "We are taking the legal route to put the capital back on the agenda, but if Morales refuses to respect the law, we will take radical action again, and this time it will be at a national level." * ================================================================= .NY Transfer News Collective * A Service of Blythe Systems . Since 1985 - Information for the Rest of Us . .339 Lafayette St., New York, NY 10012 http://www.blythe.org . List Archives: https://blythe-systems.com/pipermail/nytr/ . Subscribe: https://blythe-systems.com/mailman/listinfo/nytr =================================================================