Pubdate: Sat, 19 Nov 2005 Source: Financial Times (UK) Copyright: The Financial Times Limited 2005 Contact: http://www.ft.com/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/154 Author: Hal Weitzman Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/coke.htm (Cocaine) MORALES' PROMISES COULD HOLD SEEDS OF HIS OWN DOWNFALL Evo Morales is welcomed to Morochata like an ancient conquering hero. Leaders from the small potato-farming community, some 50km north-west of Cochabamba in the Bolivian highlands, anoint him with mounds of confetti that cling to his thatch of black hair. Villagers hang garlands of flowers, potatoes, beans and coca leaves around his neck. Crowds throng his route through the town, cheering, setting off home-made fireworks and jostling to be near him. Thousands have gathered in the main square to listen to a speech by the man who in 10 years has brought his radical Movement to Socialism (MAS) to the brink of power. "In the 1940s, your grandfathers here kicked out the landowners," Mr Morales tells them. "Today, the new landowners are transnational companies that control our gas, oil and forests. We will govern as owners of our land, and nationalise our natural resources." The crowd responds with wild applause. The campaign pledges may come to haunt Mr Morales if, as most polls suggest, he wins the presidential race on December 18. The high expectations his candidacy has created in towns such as Morochata could threaten his ability to govern. Mr Morales probably has a better chance of securing short-term social peace in the deeply divided country than either of his main opponents - - Jorge Quiroga, the conservative former president, or Samuel Doria Medina, a politically inexperienced cement magnate. However, if he wins Mr Morales may struggle to buck the recent trend of short-lived presidencies: heads of state have on average lasted little more than a year in office this century. That is mainly because in the past five years the street has become Bolivia's fourth arm of government. Mass protests - usually by radical indigenous groups - have toppled two presidents and forced out foreign investors. The main demands of protests this year have been nationalisation of gas and an assembly to rewrite the constitution. In itself, a Morales victory would not satisfy these demands. "Elections are not a solution to the problems facing Bolivia," says Oscar Olivera, a factory workers' leader in Cochabamba and a central figure in the social movements that are clamouring for change. Although Mr Morales is often portrayed as the creator and director of street mobilisation, he has often had to run to catch up. On gas, for example, he originally demanded revenues be divided equally between foreign investors and the state, only calling for nationalisation after it became a central demand of mass protests. Nationalisation of the gas sector - the second largest in the region - - will be a critical test. The MAS lacks a detailed policy, but Mr Morales has shunned expropriation, instead pledging to revise contracts and talking of the need for "partners, not masters". He would also face pressure from foreign investors such as Repsol, British Gas and Total. They have already threatened to take the country to court over a hydrocarbons law passed in May that imposed a new 32 per cent tax at the wellhead. If Bolivia were to impose more punitive measures, some companies would probably resort to international arbitration. The battle over a constituent assembly also promises to be fierce. There are deep divisions over whether the body should have power only over procedural issues or if it should also be able to decide substantial matters such as economic policy. Mr Morales began his political career as a coca-growers' leader, and he has promised to decriminalise the cultivation of coca, which has for centuries been used as a natural stimulant, but is also the raw material for cocaine. This has put him at odds with Washington, the largest bilateral donor, two-thirds of whose $150m (a,-127m, AUKP87m) annual aid goes on eradicating the plantt.. A MAS government would also face an array of hostile domestic forces. The wealthy south-eastern province of Santa Cruz, where support for Mr Morales is weak, is a natural enemy. Mr Quiroga's supporters are likely to control the Senate, and most of the new departmental prefects will be opponents of the MAS. But ultimately, a Morales administration could be brought down by failing to satisfy its supporters. Asked how long the social movements would grant Mr Morales to nationalise the gas industry, Mr Olivera is unequivocal: "We will give him one day. - --- MAP posted-by: Beth Wehrman