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It was supposed to be a day of celebration for the
Virgin of Rosario, the patron saint of miners. Yet events in Huanuni, Bolivia delayed the festival interminably. In place of the
celebration, the archbishop presided over a mass for 16 people killed in a two-day
conflict between miners over access to tin deposits. As an uneasy peace returned
to the town, a nearby soccer field turned battlefield was still carved up by
craters from dynamite explosions and stained red with the blood of miners.(1)
The desperation that led the miners of Huanuni to turn their sticks of dynamite
into weapons is the product of economic policies that have pitted the poor
against the poor, leading Bolivian Vice President Alvaro García Linera to
describe Huanuni’s tin as “something that should have been a blessing for the
country [and] has been turned into a curse.”(2)
The clash in Huanuni in October 2006 was but one of
many resource conflicts, which continue to ravage Latin America. In the last six years, new struggles and protest
movements have emerged in Bolivia over what I have called the “price of fire,”
access to basic elements of survival—gas, water, land, coca, employment, and
other resources. While national and international business and political elites
have worked to open Bolivian markets and sell public services to the lowest
bidder, the majority of citizens have found that the price of fire has risen
beyond their means. In the face of unresponsive government ministers and
corporate executives, excluded sectors have often decided to take matters into
their own hands. This book looks at these struggles, in which everyday people
have risen up against the privatization of survival.
The trajectory of the book uncovers the larger story
of a region in revolt, beginning with indigenous uprisings against Spanish
rule, focusing in on social movements in the last six years and ending with
reports from the first year of the administration of indigenous president Evo Morales.
The following chapters view Latin
America through the lens of
Bolivian protest movements, traveling beyond the landlocked country’s borders
to make comparisons between similar resource struggles. These narratives also
document the recent transition of Latin American leftist movements from the
streets into the political office.
Bolivia has been a longtime lab rat for neoliberalism, an
economic system that promised increased freedoms, better standards of living
and economic prosperity, but in many cases resulted in increased poverty
and weakened public services. When the system failed and people resisted, governments
applied these policies through the barrel of a gun. Popular social movements
emerged in response to this economic and military violence, leading
neoliberalism to dig its own grave in Latin America. The
Price of Fire tells the story of the successful movements that developed in
the wake of these failed military and economic models.
The first chapter is designed to create a political,
social and economic context through which the reader can see Bolivian and Latin
American resource conflicts as a continuation of past clashes. This includes not
only an introduction to the history of Bolivian indigenous, mining, and farmer
movements, but also a primer on neoliberal economic policies and imperial
strategies in Washington’s “backyard.”
Bolivian cocaleros (coca farmers) organized
unions to defend their right to grow coca leaves and resist the military
repression of the US War on Drugs. In the second chapter, I address the
failures of US-funded anti-coca policies and military activities in Bolivia, and present a history of how one of the country’s
most powerful social movements grew in the face of repression, transformed
itself into a political party and put cocalero Evo Morales into the
presidential palace.
Though Bolivian social movements have always been
strong in the face of corporate robbery, the Cochabamba Water War in 2000
brought international attention to Bolivia from the “anti-globalization” activist community.
The residents of Cochabamba rose up when the multinational Bechtel Corporation
bought their public and communal water systems. In a classic example of the
failure of the privatization of a basic resource, the company’s rate hikes and
exclusive water rights sparked a revolt that continues to rock the country’s
social and political landscape. In chapter three I discuss the disastrous
effects of corporate control of water, as well as the lasting impacts the 2000
uprising had on Bolivia and the limited success of the subsequently public-controlled water system.
Much of Latin American economics in the last 50 years
has been dictated by the forceful advice of financial institutions such as the
International Monetary Fund (IMF) and the World Bank. In 2003, Bolivian police
took up arms against a government that wanted to slash their pay in an
IMF-backed income tax increase. In chapter four, I look at this conflict
through the eyes of a soldier turned hip-hop artist and a policeman involved in
the street battles, while linking the crisis to Argentina’s IMF-inspired crash
just two years earlier. Both conflicts exhibit the disparity between what IMF
officials advocate and how these policies play out on the ground.
Governments and economies that favor corporations and
wealthy elites have created such an unequal distribution of wealth in Latin America that many people are left without the means to
survive.(3) In many cases, the much-needed jobs, land or public space are
unoccupied, but off limits. This situation has given rise to social movements which
have occupied, defended, and put to use these spaces in order to support
themselves, their families, and their communities. In chapter five, I describe
common threads between struggles over land in Bolivia, Paraguay, and Brazil and the occupation of factories and businesses by unemployed
Argentine workers. I also tell the story of former detainees taking over a jail
in Venezuela and transforming it into a community radio station.
Each of these occupations was based on the slogan “occupy, resist, produce,” a
strategy which typifies the larger people’s struggle against corporate
exploitation and neoliberal displacement.
The history of Latin America has been one of expropriation. Governments and
companies first in Europe, and then in the United States, saw these countries
as a source of free raw material and open markets for manufactured goods.
Resources, and with them workers’ rights and public services, have been
squashed in a post-colonial free for all. In chapter six, I discuss how
Bolivians want their gas reserves used for national development, and how Venezuela has used oil profits for social change. The history
of Bolivian gas industrialization and nationalization offers insights into
ongoing conflicts over the resource. Though the current nationalization process
in Venezuela could be applied to Bolivia, policies in both countries have their faults. Here,
I explain how one of the countries with the most wealth in its subsoil can be
one of the poorest above ground, and how Bolivians tried to change this
resource curse through the Gas War, a popular uprising in 2003 that reversed
corporate policies and ousted a president.
Better worlds—some that have lasted, some no more
than euphoric glimpses—have been forged by Bolivian community organizations and
mobilizations where people created their own infrastructure and banded together
to demand necessary changes. In Bolivia, where state rule exerts a historically weak
hegemony over the country, power is decidedly in the hands of the people. In
the city of El Alto, the indigenous and union roots of rural and mining
migrants have created a country within a country. These neighborhood
organizations have filled the void of the state to build and maintain public
infrastructure, make political and economic decisions, and represent residents.
In chapter seven, I discuss the history of this self-made city, its capacity
for mobilization and how these grassroots strengths were put to use in the 2003
Gas War.
Next to the social organizations and unions,
political artistic movements have flowered in Bolivia, creating change in their own way. Chapter eight
looks at three social organizations that do more than protest and lobby
government officials. Teatro Trono, in El Alto, is a theater troupe of
homeless and at-risk children that uses the stage to grapple with difficult
social issues and to transform the lives of young actors. The feminist-anarchist
group, Mujeres Creando, seeks to change the world without taking power,
and fights against gender inequality and machismo in Bolivia. A growing hip-hop movement in Bolivia is using lyrics in Spanish as well as Quechua and
Aymara, the languages of the two largest indigenous groups in Bolivia, as “instruments of struggle.” These three groups
have collectively built their paradises outside the realm of state and
corporate power, widening the capacity for broader social change in Bolivia.
While social movements can oust governments and
corporations, they also take their toll on stability and transitions between
political leaders. Chapter nine deals with the tightrope walk of Bolivian
President Carlos Mesa over a country in turmoil. Conflicts regarding water and
gas nationalization re-emerged during his time in office, leading the country
once again into a national uprising. In this chapter, I also look at other
worker and political gains and challenges in Argentina and Uruguay, where along with Bolivia, people-powered movements gained momentum both in
the street and the government palace.
At Evo Morales’ traditional inauguration in the
ancient Aymaran ruins of Tiwanaku in January 2006, hope was enough to carry the
day. Morales, a self-described anti-imperialist, promised radical changes for his
impoverished nation, pledging to nationalize gas reserves, expand legal coca
markets, redistribute land to poor farmers and organize an assembly to rewrite
the country’s constitution. While social movements dance with Morales to the
music of globalization, the chains of previous neoliberal policies and
right-wing governments still hold the country down.
At the time of this writing, Morales’ campaign
promises are in jeopardy and many wonder if his administration has done all it
can to formalize and protect the victories forged in street mobilizations. My analysis
of the dynamic Bolivian social movements that have emerged in the past few
decades illustrates how organized citizens paved the way to the Morales
victory. In the last chapter, the lens widens to include Morales’ first several
months in office and his place in the current leftist shift sweeping the
continent.
This book is a people’s account of re-colonization
and resistance, with dispatches from the streets, coca farms, mines, and
government palaces. It is based on interviews with activists, factory workers,
hip-hop artists, Evo Morales, street vendors, policemen, right-wing business owners,
and community radio producers. The similarities and differences between the
people, movements, and conflicts discussed here have much to teach. They
present a range of creative strategies for resisting global neoliberalism in
urban and rural settings. They also manifest an affirmation that these
struggles are not isolated events, but part of the battle for vital resources
in an ever more populated and corporate world.
At best, this book is but one representation of a
vast and complex region. My aim is to make complicated issues more accessible
and give a human face to the looting and struggles of a continent. Within that goal
and scope, there are many important issues and inspiring Latin American
movements that time and narrative do not permit me to discuss in the depth they
deserve, or at all. I hope, however, that the accounts presented here will be
of use to students and workers, activists and academics, travelers and
homebodies, and any combination. In that light, this book provides a colorful
introduction to Latin American social movements and resource conflicts, with a
focus on Bolivia, as well as new perspectives and insights for
experts and longtime observers of a region where corporate globalization has
met its match.
Benjamin Dangl
Cochabamba, Bolivia
November 7, 2006
(Endnotes)
1 "Los sectores mineros de Huanuni declaran una
tregua," Especiales/Guerra del estaño. La Razón (October 7, 2006). Also "Bolivia deploys 700 police to quell deadly miners' conflict," The Associated Press
(October 5, 2006).
2 For more information on this conflict, see April
Howard and Benjamin Dangl, “Tin War in Bolivia: Conflict Between Miners Leaves 17 Dead,” Upside
Down World, (October 11, 2006), http://upsidedownworld.org/main/content/view/455/1/.
3 Nearly half of the people living in Latin America and the Caribbean are poor, and nearly 20 percent live in extreme poverty. For
more information, see Latin America & the Caribbean, United
Nations Population Fund, http://www.unfpa.org/latinamerica/.
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