[R-G] Native Groups Express Solidarity with Bolivian Leader

Anthony Fenton fentona at shaw.ca
Mon Sep 22 22:45:11 MDT 2008


LATIN AMERICA:  Native Groups Express Solidarity with Bolivian Leader
By Kintto Lucas
http://www.ipsnews.net/news.asp?idnews=43958

QUITO, Sep 22 (IPS) - Indigenous organisations from several countries  
in Latin America declared their solidarity with Bolivian President Evo  
Morales with respect to the crisis in his country, and are preparing a  
major gathering in La Paz, Bolivia within the next few weeks.

Humberto Cholango, the head of Ecuarunari, which groups Quechua  
communities from Ecuador’s highlands region, warned that an attempted  
coup against Morales could trigger a generalised uprising by  
indigenous people throughout the Andean region.

"The indigenous movement in Ecuador and other countries is on the  
alert to any attempt to overthrow our brother Evo (Bolivia’s first- 
ever indigenous president) by economic power groups backed by the  
government of the United States," Cholango told IPS.

"The U.S. government has always meddled in the affairs of the  
countries of Latin America, and lately has supported attempts to  
organise coups in Venezuela and Bolivia," said the native leader.

Ecuarunari, the biggest association within the powerful Ecuadorean  
Confederation of Indigenous Nationalities (CONAIE), also forms part of  
the Unidad por el Sí y el Cambio, a coalition of urban and rural  
social organisations that are calling on voters to approve the new  
constitution in the Sept. 28 referendum, but are independent from and  
critical of the government of left-leaning President Rafael Correa.

Unidad por el Sí y el Cambio was the first organisation to publicly  
declare its solidarity with Bolivia, urging Correa on Sept. 11 to  
offer his unconditional support to the Morales administration.

The manifesto signed by more than 100 social organisations and dozens  
of personalities warned that in Bolivia there are "attempts by  
economic power groups to destabilise the democratic government, with  
the support of the U.S. ambassador, and by resorting to armed violence  
against the civilian population."

It added that the Bolivian government and people are engaged in a  
determined effort to "build a country based on equality and fully  
integrated with the rest of Latin America."

On Sept. 11, between 15 and 30 indigenous supporters of Morales were  
killed and dozens injured in what has been dubbed the "Porvenir  
massacre", for the town near the spot where it occurred in Bolivia’s  
northern Amazon jungle province of Pando.

The survivors described the incident as an "ambush" by the opposition,  
and video footage shows people desperately swimming across a river to  
escape, under gunfire. Several dozen people who went missing after the  
incident are still being sought in the surrounding bush and rivers by  
the security forces and local families.

The rightwing governor of Pando, Leopoldo Fernández, is under arrest  
and facing trial for inciting violence.

The incident was the bloodiest in over a week of often violent  
protests by the rightwing opposition in Bolivia’s relatively wealthy  
eastern provinces.

On Sept. 12, a number of indigenous organisations and social movements  
created the Bolivia Solidarity Committee.

"We will not allow the violence, racism and xenophobia against  
indigenous people and poor peasant farmers to take root in the region,  
as occurred on Thursday (Sept. 11) in the Bolivian department  
(province) of Pando," said Cholango.

"We indigenous people are carrying forward peaceful changes, in  
democracy. We don't want violence, but if there is provocation, we can  
respond, as we have shown before," said Cholango, who is also a leader  
of the Andean Coordinator of Indigenous Organisations (CAOI), which  
brings together groups from Argentina, Bolivia, Chile, Colombia,  
Ecuador and Peru.

The indigenous leader said that "a great global chain of solidarity  
with Bolivia" is being created by indigenous and social organisations  
as well as intellectuals throughout South America, which will  
culminate in a major demonstration in La Paz.

"Our commitment is to defend any sister nation attacked by local  
elites and the U.S. empire," said the activist. "All of us who want  
change in Abya Yala (‘the Americas’ in the Kuna language) are with  
Bolivia."

Indigenous Mexican immigrants in the United States, organised in the  
Embassy of Indigenous Peoples, also expressed support for Morales.

"The era of decolonisation has arrived on our continent Abya Yala,  
which is now experiencing the birth pangs of a new reality for all of  
our societies," said a statement issued by the organisation.

"The shout heard throughout the continent is one of liberation, in  
keeping with the promise expressed by the United Nations Declaration  
on the Rights of Indigenous Peoples," added the Embassy of Indigenous  
Peoples, based in the U.S. state of Arizona.

"As Nations of Indigenous Peoples of North Abya Yala, the members of  
the Confederacy of the Eagle and the Condor are today in solidarity  
with our brothers of Tawantinsuyo (the Quechua name for the Inca  
empire) and the leadership of President Evo Morales of Bolivia," they  
said.

They also condemned "the acts of violence perpetrated by  
paramilitaries" in Bolivia and "legal meddling and manipulation" by  
the United States "which led to the direct consequence that the  
ambassador in Bolivia was named persona non grata."

Indigenous organisations from Guatemala, Colombia, Peru, Chile, Panama  
and Venezuela also expressed their solidarity with the Bolivian  
government.

Cecilia Flores, president of the National Aymara Council of Chile,  
said in a statement that "in the face of the serious incidents of  
violence that have occurred in our sister republic of Bolivia,  
especially in the departments of Pando, Beni, Tarija and Santa Cruz,  
we, as an indigenous movement, offer our solidarity and support to the  
Bolivian people as a whole, and especially to indigenous organisations."

She also expressed "unconditional support to the constitutional  
government of President Evo Morales, a democratic government that was  
ratified by more than 60 percent of its people -- an example for the  
nations of Abya Yala and a hope for the peoples of the Americas."

She was referring to the Aug. 10 recall referendum in which 67 percent  
of voters backed Morales.

In response to the crisis in Bolivia, the recently created South  
American Union of Nations (UNASUR) held an emergency summit in Chile  
on Sept. 15, and the leaders of the region declared their "fullest and  
most decisive support for the constitutional government of President  
Evo Morales."

They also said they "vigorously reject and will not grant recognition  
to any situation that implies a civil coup or the rupture of the  
institutional order, or that will undermine the territorial integrity  
of the republic of Bolivia."

In addition, the presidents condemned "the massacre in the department  
of Pando" and backed the call issued by the Bolivian government for  
the creation of a UNASUR commission to carry out an impartial  
investigation to clarify the incident and set forth recommendations to  
ensure that those responsible would be held accountable. (END/2008) 


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