Pubdate: Tue, 21 Oct 2003 Source: St. Petersburg Times (FL) Copyright: 2003 St. Petersburg Times Contact: http://www.sptimes.com/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/419 Author: David Adams,Times Latin America Correspondent Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/areas/Bolivia Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/people/Sanho+Tree NEW LATIN AMERICA MOVEMENT -- MASS DISCONTENT MIAMI - In November last year the president of Bolivia, Gonzalo Sanchez de Lozada, visited Washington to ask for assistance. In a meeting with President Bush he pleaded for a pause in the eradication of Bolivia's coca crops, the plant used to process cocaine. He also asked for extra financial aid. His country was in dire straits, he warned. Without urgent help his government would collapse. "We are not discussing that," Bush told Sanchez de Lozada, according to someone who was in the room. Last Friday, as tens of thousands of angry protesters descended on the capital screaming for his head, Sanchez de Lozada quit and fled to Miami with his family. Bolivia is only the latest South American country to be thrown into political turmoil. In the last three years, both Venezuela and Ecuador have experienced major outbreaks of street violence and attempted coup d'etats. Argentina is still recovering from a political and economic meltdown in late 2001. Latin America is in a state of "unmanageability," comparable only to a period of fiscal implosion in the 1930s as the United States went through the Great Depression, said Jorge Nef, a professor at the University of South Florida. Those years led to military dictatorship. Today, in one form or another, the countries of the region are victims of an explosive mix of unpopular economic measures, centuries of social and ethnic exclusion and political corruption. It has created a new movement of mass discontent. "It's a new tune. It's not the communist guerrillas, or Che Guevara of the past," said Nef, director of the Center for Latin American, Caribbean and Latino Studies at USF. "It's a popular mass of unemployed people." Bolivia's fate is being closely watched by the antiglobalization movement, which argues that open markets and free trade have had a negative effect on weak Third World economies. It's not only labor unions and student and civic groups who make that case today. A new wave of political leaders, including Hugo Chavez in Venezuela and the recently elected presidents of Brazil and Argentina, Luis Ignacio Lula da Silva and Nestor Kirchner, have all expressed doubts about the benefits of opening their countries to international trade and investment. In Bolivia, South America's poorest country, an estimated 60 percent of its population of 8-million live on less than $2 a day. Almost 70 percent are Aymara and Quechua indigenous peoples, long marginalized by Bolivia's European-descended elite. Bolivia has "one of the worst patterns of wealth distribution in the Western Hemisphere," according to Eduardo Gamarra, a Bolivian-born director of Latin American studies at Florida International University. On top of that are the enormous demands of U.S. counterdrug policy. In Bolivia's case, that has meant the eradication of 90 percent of the country's once lucrative coca harvest. "Washington pushed too hard," said Sanho Tree, director of the Drug Policy Project at the Institute for Policy Studies, a Washington-based watchdog group. "You can't squeeze blood out of a stone." Sanchez de Lozada, 73, was once a respected reformer. A millionaire with mining interests, he played an important role in the 1980s in consolidating Bolivian democracy after decades of military dictatorship. As president from 1993-97 he oversaw further democratic and market-based economic reforms. But Bolivia has little to show for economic "modernization." After its inefficient, state-run mining industry was shut down in the mid-1980s, 23,000 people were thrown out of work. When no alternative was provided, many turned to growing coca. In its nonnarcotic form, the coca leaf has long been chewed by peasants to stave off hunger, and to make tea. But, when drug traffickers seized the opportunity in the 1980s, Bolivia became the world's largest producer of cocaine. U.S. promises of financial aid led to the coca leaf being all but wiped out by the late 1990s. Despite U.S. help, Bolivia has struggled to find economic alternatives to coca growing. The country has many disadvantages when it comes to competing with its neighbors for foreign trade and investment, say analysts. "Real economic alternatives, especially urban jobs in export-oriented sectors, are a much tougher proposition, given that Bolivia is a mountainous and landlocked country 12,000 feet above sea level," according to Columbia University economics professor Jeffrey Sachs. "Without major investment in transport, communications and industrial zones, only a few products such as coca leaf can bear the transport costs entailed by this rugged geography," he wrote in a recent article. Since Bolivia began to introduce free-market reforms, its exports have in fact fallen during the past 25 years. That was the situation Sanchez de Lozada encountered when he was elected again in August 2002. That is why he went to Washington last November. His timing was unfortunate; Bush was preoccupied at the time with the looming invasion of Iraq. Rejected by the White House he turned to the only other remaining place, the International Monetary Fund. In return for its help Sanchez de Lozada proposed an unpopular tax hike. That sparked rioting in which more than 30 people died. Sanchez de Lozada urgently renewed his cry for help from Washington. The United States responded with $10-million. It wouldn't be enough. Opponents began to focus their criticism directly on the president, or "El gringo," as he is widely known. Oddly for a Latin American head of state, Sanchez de Lozada speaks an imperfect Spanish with a heavy American accent, a product of years spent in exile and a degree from the University of Chicago. Unfairly perhaps, his accent contributed to identifying him as a lapdog for the United States. The final crisis was sparked by public outrage over a multibillion- dollar project to sell natural gas to the United States. Bolivia has the second-largest natural gas reserves in Latin America, worth an estimated $21-billion over the next 20 years. But protesters objected to a gas concession granted to a foreign consortium, Pacific LNG, led by British and Spanish companies. They bitterly recalled the recent privatization of the state water company - - granted to the U.S. corporate giant Bechtel - which led to increased prices and rioting, dubbed the "water wars." For many Bolivians the country's gas fields are a national patrimony and should be kept for cheap domestic use, rather than foreign exploitation. Historically, they had little reason to believe the country's new gas riches would reach the poorest. Bolivia's democratic future remains in doubt. For the time being Vice President Carlos Mesa, formerly the country's top TV newscaster, has assumed the presidency. In a powerful speech on taking office he appealed to the country for unity, promising to hold a binding referendum on the gas project. Calm has returned to the streets, but Mesa may have a hard time keeping the peace. "This is only a temporary reprieve for a country that has fallen apart," Gamarra said. - --- MAP posted-by: Larry Seguin