From: guiller@cats.ucsc.edu
Date: Tue, 2 May 1995 15:15:04 -0700
To: native-l@gnosys.svle.ma.us
Subject: Bolivia (fwd)
Date: Thursday, April 27, 1995 8:49PM
Newsgroups: misc.activism.progressive
{1} Bolivian General Strike!
** Written 8:10 PM Apr 23, 1995 by gn:antek in cdp:pn.alerts **
BOLIVIAN UNION SOLIDARITY COMMITTEE
BCM 7750 London WC1N 3XX
On Wednesday 19 of April the Bolivian government declared a
state of siege--a major state of emergency which involves the
suspension of all constitutional rights. No more than three people
are allowed to assemble and there is a strict curfew. When the
"Central Obrera Boliviana" (Bolivia's TUC) held a national
conference comprised of delegates from all the factories, mines,
peasant unions, universities and other unions, the police and the
army broke into the meeting at midnight and arrested all of the
participants.
Already more than 1,000 trade union, student, peasant and
political leaders have been arrested. All of them have been
deported to military garrison in the most inhospitable and
isolated places in the country. Some of them are in the hottest
and most remote places in the Amazon region, places which are
insect ridden and prone to terrible tropical diseases. Others in
contrast are freezing in the Bolivian Siberia: the coldest places in
the Andes, up to 4,000 metres above sea level when the snows of
winter are beginning to fall.
Vilma Plata and Gonzalo Sorucco, leaders of the La Paz Urban
Teachers Union, were jailed one month ago. They are being kept in
jail with common criminals and are being threatened with
sentences of between four to fifteen years in jail for organising
and advocating strikes. With the new state of siege the military
have seized all key points in the country: they control the streets,
schools, universities and workplaces. They have been given the
right to hold people without trial.
This is the response of an anti-popular government to the
protests of the great mass of the population. For about one and a
half months the Bolivian teachers have been on indefinite national
strike against the privatisation of education, for an increased
budget for education and for better wages.
Teachers, like the rest of the Bolivian workers, earn less than
#100 a month. With neo-liberalism and globalisation they have to
buy foods and goods with European-level prices despite the fact
that they earn African-level wages.
The national teachers strike were so effective that it mobilised
the support of the parents and student associations and also of
the universities, community organisations and other unions. From
the countryside it spread to the main cities, involving thousands
of teachers, peasants and students walking many days in
"sacrifice marches" through the freezing highlands. The
telecommunications system and state mines were also on strike
against privatisation. All the important cities declared civic
general strikes, in support of them. A spontaneous general strike,
launched by all the unions and peasant organisations, was
developing with daily mass demonstrations that on several times
defeated the state forces which tried to repress them.
According to the Guardian (April 20-1995) "The Bolivian Labour
Confederation (COB) launched a general strike three weeks ago in
support of teachers' demands. Teachers and other demonstrators,
armed with sticks and stones, have clashed daily with police in La
Paz over the past few days. In Tarija, a province on Bolivia's
southern border with Argentina, unrest led citizens to declare
their administration independence last week from President
Gonzalo Sanchez de Lozada's government."
After the declaration of the state of siege the COB elected a
clandestine committee of resistance that is continuing with the
general strike and is organising street demonstrations, blockades
in the streets and roads and barricades. The government is using
its new authoritarian powers to persecute the unions, peasants
organisations and oppositions parties.
This is not the first time that Sanchez de Lozada has used the
military and a state of siege against worker and popular
discontent. In 1985, only a few days after he was nominated as
the economics minister, he declared a vicious programme of
economic shock therapy. He froze wages and at the same time in
one day he raised by 15 times the prices of all goods! When the
COB launched a general strike his government declared state of
siege. Later, in August 1986, when 15,000 miners, teachers and
other people were marching to the capital to fight for better
wages and against the closure of mines, he used the army and
declared another state of siege, to crush this fight. Faced with
this repression thousands of miners and other workers entered
the galleries of the mines, hundred of metres underground, and
carried on a hunger strike.
Since then it has become a tradition of the Bolivian people's to
resist the neo-liberal policies, started under Sanchez de Lozada
when he was economics minister, and continued when he is now is
president. Sanchez de Lozada is a man who was educated in the
USA and speaks a bad Spanish with a strong North American
accent. he doesn't speak any of the Indian languages which two
thirds of the population speaks. he is one of the richest men in the
country. he is himself the owner of the biggest mining company in
Bolivia and he is using his power to sell at knock down prices all
the state companies, sack the majority of the workers from their
jobs and destroyed the state mining company Comibol, which
before he came to office was the most important Bolivian
company, with the aim of increasing his own private business
interests ad those of his friends.
We ask the entire Labour movement and indeed all democratic
people in Britain and in Europe to support the right of the Bolivian
people to have trade union rights and democratic freedoms and to
put an immediate end to the state of siege. We demand the
immediate and unconditional release of ALL political and union
prisoners. We call on every trade union, solidarity committee,
immigrant centre, community organisation,, MP, local government
representative, student union, and political party to send faxes,
telegrams or letters of protest to the Bolivian embassy and to the
Bolivian government. We are also seeking signatures in support of
a petition for the release of all the political and union prisoners
and for the ending of the state of siege. We are organising an
emergency picket outside Bolivian embassy next Wednesday, the
26th of April at 18:30 After this picket we will have a co-
ordination meeting to unite all the forces that willing to
organise further actions. we also appeal to all organisations to
sponsor our campaign
% Active Support the Bolivian People!
% Support the Bolivian Unions strikes and demands for better
wages and against privatisation of education!
% End of the state of siege now!
% For the immediate and unconditional release of all political and
trade union prisoners!
END THE STATE OF EMERGENCY IN BOLIVIA!
RELEASE ALL TRADE UNION AND POLITICAL PRISONERS!
PICKET BOLIVIAN EMBASSY: 106 EATON SQ, LONDON SW1
WED 26 APRIL 6.30PM Send letters of protest to: Presidencia de la
Republica, Palacio de Gobierno, Plaza Murillo, La Paz, Bolivia.
Send faxes to the Bolivian Embassy: Fax No: 0171 235 1286
23-4-95
The Bolivian Union Solidarity Committee in London sent hundreds
of petitions. Different MPs, unions, all the left parties, solidarity
committees, Latin American groups, etc. distributed the leaflet
and the petition. Next Wednesday we will go to picket the Bolivian
embassy and present thousands of signatures.
Our telephone number is:
(UK)- 0171-613 2426
PO BOX 7750 London WC1N 3XX UK
e-mail antek@gn.apc.org
Pleae, collaborate with the Bolivian workers and people
resistence. Organize pickets in your cities,
Come to our picket,
Send letters and faxes to the Bolivian embassies,
organize rallies and demonstrations,
Contact us!
** End of text from cdp:pn.alerts **
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Box 28703
Oakland, CA 94604
(510) 834-4263 Fax: (510) 834-4264 Email: saiic@igc.apc.org
Home Page: http://www.igc.apc.org/saiic/saiic.html
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