The Narco News Bulletin |
August 16, 2018 | Issue #33 |
narconews.com - Reporting on the Drug War and Democracy from Latin America |
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COCHABAMBA, Bolivia, June 4, 2004. Representatives of Bolivia's diverse social movements, together with the Central Obrera Boliviana (COB, the main Bolivian labor federation), met today in a great popular assembly and resolved to reject the referendum questions on gas that President Carlos Mesa has proposed, and to begin mobilizations for the nationalization of the country's hydrocarbons (natural gas and other mineral resources).
COB executive secretary Jaime Solares said the time had arrived "to make a true rebellion" against what he called the crooked, corrupt, and sold-out political class. The members of that class, said Solares, hope to use the referendum simply to validate the eighty-four contracts they have already signed with transnational corporations to exploit the country's natural resources.
The referendum, set for July 18, has generated much controversy among the people of this South American nation. They are deeply divided. The referendum has the support of major Bolivian companies, traditional politicians, the commercial media and the transnational corporations with interests here. It has been rejected, however, by the social movements, which are working together to make their voices heard.
Solares said that the nation's fate must not be in the hands of a racist minority in power only by circumstance, which now obeys only the orders of transnational corporations and the U.S. government.
"The poor people of this country have also agreed to tell the U.S. ambassador not to interfere with out country's internal affairs. The time has come to realize a revolutionary unity to change the destiny of the nation."
While the popular sectors prepare for, the government has spent the last two weeks in an intense media campaign to win the population's support for the referendum. The government's referendum will have five questions, none of which addresses the nationalization of the country's hydrocarbons.
National Gas Coordinating Committee spokesman Oscar Olivera said that the time has come to organize mobilizations across the country. He explained that for this new phase of Bolivia's "gas war" to have real, long-lasting effects, the strength for this effort must come from the grassroots, from below.
Olivera proposed a mobilization with a single message: immediate nationalization of the hydrocarbons. He further proposed a great march, if the government would not listen to them, to the capital La Paz to stop the referendum from happening.
Different groups have recently organized isolated mobilizations. Starting today, they hope to unite their forces.
In today's assembly, representatives participated from all across the country, including workers, peasant farmers, intellectuals, trade unionists, students, mineworkers, social activists, housewives, and others.
As the event concluded, the representatives signed a declaration that read, in part:
Mark yes if you agree with the nationalization of the hydrocarbons, understood as the immediate recovery of the entirety of the hydrocarbon reserves for their exploitation by the Bolivian State, through the annulment, resolution, or modification of all written contracts with companies from the private sector.
YES NO
In the final part of the manifesto, the Bolivian people, from the city and from the countryside, are invited to join the campaign, spread the word, debate, and demonstrate their will. "The long march of the social movements has now begun; we must reclaim what is ours as we always have - by fighting for it."