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Bolivian will resume month-long protests against a road in the Amazon

Thursday, September 29th 2011 - 06:16 UTC
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A real test for a former protestors’ march leader and now president  A real test for a former protestors’ march leader and now president

Bolivian demonstrators opposed to the construction of a road in the Amazon vowed on Wednesday to resume a month-long protest march that has become a major challenge to leftist President Evo Morales.

The march by poor Indians who live in the path of the planned 420 million dollars road has become a problem for Morales, who is Bolivia's first leader of indigenous descent and led many anti-government protests in his days as leader of the coca farmers.

Two of Morales' cabinet ministers have resigned this week after police broke up the protest over the weekend, firing tear gas and briefly detaining marchers in a raid on a camp they were using en route to the capital city of La Paz.

The defence minister resigned in protest at the police raid. Morales' interior minister, who had become the focus of criticism from opposition politicians, stepped down in an apparent effort to limit political damage from the crackdown.

Emboldened by a wave of sympathy protests in urban areas and a strike called by the COB labour federation, the anti-road demonstrators said they would resume their march toward the country's administrative capital.

“Long live this historic march ... the march goes on,” protest leader Mariana Guasania said in the Amazon tourist town of Rurrenabaque, where some 200 protesters have regrouped since the police crackdown.

The demonstrators, who hail from the Isiboro Secure indigenous territory and national park, want a law guaranteeing that the Brazil-financed road will bypass their territory. The road is part of a planned link between the Brazilian Atlantic and the Pacific.

Their Wednesday announcement and the accompanying protests by supporters, increase pressure on Morales to resolve the conflict over the government-backed road plan.

Besides reshuffling his cabinet, Morales has sought to ease tensions over the project by halting construction work and calling for a referendum in the two provinces that it would link to determine whether the project should go ahead.

Social protests are common in Bolivia, the region's biggest natural gas exporter, but tensions have eased since Morales was elected in 2005 on pledges to give more political power to the indigenous majority.

However, it is the second time in less than a year that he has faced fierce opposition from his own powerbase over a government policy. Late last year, a wave of strikes and street protests prompted him to roll back a hefty fuel hike.

Protests by indigenous activists to the road pose a dilemma for Morales, who has put the project at the heart of his strategy to improve the country's dilapidated road system.
 

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  • Kirk Nelson

    In just one week, the Bolivian government has observed the permanent departure of three high rank goverment officials, simply because they understand that in the past indigenous population have been denied its portion of wealth distrubition and financial benefits since the natural resources are located on their territory or area.

    But, make sure that if the major infrastructures are schools and hospitals indigenous will welcome it, otherwise they will protest as in this highway infrastructure case until the government fully comprehend and meet thier social needs first.

    Kirk Nelson,
    New York, USA

    Sep 30th, 2011 - 12:01 am 0
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