Pubdate: Mon, 23 Jan 2006 Source: Washington Post (DC) Page: A01 - Front Page Copyright: 2006 The Washington Post Company Contact: http://www.washingtonpost.com/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/491 Author: Monte Reel, Washington Post Foreign Service Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/people/Evo+Morales Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/topics/Bolivia Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/topics/coca FOR BOLIVIAN MAJORITY, A NEW PROMISE Nation's First Indian President Vows to Chart Course Independent of U.S. LA PAZ, Bolivia -- The streets of this colonial city erupted in song and fireworks Sunday to celebrate the inauguration of Evo Morales, Bolivia's first Indian president, who promised to begin reversing centuries of social injustice, shield the country from U.S. influence and reclaim natural resources that he says have been exploited by international capitalism. Morales, 46, broke into tears before addressing Bolivia's Congress and the presidents of many neighboring South American countries, a gathering that illustrated the region's ongoing political shift toward socialism. The former coca grower likened his historic rise to power in Bolivia, where people of Indian descent make up more than 60 percent of the population, to the end of apartheid in South Africa. "This morning I was very happy to see my brothers and sisters singing in the historical Plaza Murillo and Plaza San Francisco," Morales said, referring to the celebrations attended by thousands of indigenous citizens in the city's main squares. "Forty or 50 years ago, we didn't even have the right to enter the Plaza San Francisco or the Plaza Murillo." Morales won the election riding a wave of discontent against the elites who have traditionally ruled the country. Massive protests have become a regular part of Bolivian life in recent years, helping to oust two presidents since 2003. But the atmosphere of celebration in the streets that lasted deep into the night was a reflection of the widespread support Morales enjoys upon entering office. An opinion poll released this weekend by the Bolivian firm Apoyo said that support for Morales stands at 74 percent, an unprecedented level in the country's recent history. "All of the other governments we have had in this country have been corrupt and have stolen from the people," said Felix Flores, an unemployed 60-year-old Quechua Indian who traveled to La Paz from Cochabamba to celebrate in Plaza San Francisco with thousands of others. "With all of that money they robbed, they could have created sources for jobs. Now Evo will." A big part of Morales's message has centered on the idea of self-determination, and he has frequently criticized the United States as an "imperial power" whose interests often run counter to those of Bolivia. The United States is Bolivia's leading provider of development aid, contributing about $655 million from 2000 to 2004. But Morales contends his country has been hurt by "neo-liberalism," a term commonly used in the region to describe Washington-backed economic policies that encourage free trade and a minimum of national commercial intervention. On Sunday, Morales labeled the policy a failure that had impoverished Bolivia while enriching wealthy foreign interests, and he vowed to protect the country from its effects. Bolivia, with 9 million citizens, remains the poorest country in South America, but it has the second-largest reserves of natural gas on the continent. Morales has pledged to nationalize the country's fuel industry and woo investment from Latin America, Europe and Asia to industrialize the sector. Expectations for change run high among his supporters, and Morales promised Sunday to convene a representative assembly to rewrite the country's constitution to more equitably distribute political power. He has tried to mollify concerns of international investors by promising not to seize private property when nationalizing the fuel sector. He has also said he wants to decriminalize the growing of coca plants and refocus the fight against drugs on those who turn the crop into cocaine. "The fight against narco-trafficking, against drugs, against cocaine, cannot be an excuse for the government of the United States to dominate our communities," Morales told the crowd, a number of whom chewed coca leaves, reflecting a long Bolivian tradition. Many analysts suggest that Morales's frequent jabs at the United States are rooted in his experience as a coca farmer and -- unlike those of Venezuela's Hugo Chavez and Cuba's Fidel Castro -- less in a specific political ideology. But many of his supporters already are linking Morales to those two leaders, whom Morales calls inspirations. In Plaza San Francisco, vendors enjoyed brisk business selling T-shirts with the names of a socialist icon and three presidents printed in simple block letters on the front: "Che, Fidel, Chavez, Evo." "Evo professes a deep and close friendship with Chavez and Castro, but he's more of a product of American policy than his relationship with those two," said Eduardo Gamarra, a Bolivia analyst at Florida International University. "He's a product of the coca wars, and he should be understood in that context." Bolivia is the latest in a line of South American countries to elect presidential candidates from socialist or unionist backgrounds. Last week, Chile elected the Socialist Party's Michelle Bachelet to succeed Ricardo Lagos, another Socialist who embraced free trade as a way to fund increased social spending in his country. And in their most recent elections, Brazil, Argentina and Uruguay have also elected presidents with backgrounds in social activism. In Peru, elections this year will replace outgoing President Alejandro Toledo, who became the first South American president of indigenous descent when he was elected in 2000. A front-runner is former colonel Ollanta Humala, a socialist. Morales was born in a thatched-roof shack in Bolivia's western highlands, and he worked as a shepherd as a young boy. As a teenager, he was a brick worker, baker and trumpet player in a traveling band. After settling in the tropical Chapare region to grow coca, he became involved in politics as the head of the Federation of Coca Farmers, which often pitted him against U.S. officials who wanted to reduce cocaine traffic by reducing the harvests of coca leaves, which must be chemically processed to produce cocaine. His criticisms of the United States are widely admired among his supporters, such as those who waved banners throughout the day in Plaza San Francisco. To them, such comments prove Morales has the courage to stand up for himself and his country. "This is our day," said Pablo Mercado, 48, a city worker in La Paz who waited for the new president to parade through the streets of the city after his speech. "Finally we have something to celebrate." - --- MAP posted-by: Richard Lake