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DIVERSITY EMPLOYERS MAGAZINE
Spring 2011 - Anniversary Commemorative Issue

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Election of Evo Morales Bodes Well for Africans in Bolivia and U.S.

By Willie Thompson San Francisco Bay View

The position of the organized Afro-Bolivians on the historic election of Evo Morales is implicit in an email received by me on Monday from Monica Rey Guiterrez, director of the Center for Afro Bolivian Development and a very dear friend and recent house guest. “Many of us are happy. Some are worried. We await the changes,” she wrote.

The apparent passivity in her response may be a function of long years of enslavement and marginalization of the Afro-Bolivians. African North Americans should now work with Evo Morales, the first indigenous president in the history of Latin America, to change these conditions. My six years’ involvement in Bolivia and the report of Dr. Chato Peredo, political advisor to Morales and the MAS (Movement Toward Socialism) Party, provide substantial reasons for supporting the Bolivian president-elect.

Dr. Paredo spoke about Bolivia’s substantial natural resources and its centuries of colonial and neo-colonial oppression at U.C. Berkeley on Nov. 7, 2005. I traveled to Santa Cruz, La Paz and Los Yungas in 1998, sponsored the first Afro-Bolivian conference, visited the Afro-Bolivians in their small communities in Corioco, Chipchipas and Tocana. I also wrote an article about my experience there and accompanied Afro-Bolivians in Washington, Venezuela and San Francisco.

“Three years ago, in 2002,” Chato said, “U.S. Ambassador to Bolivia Roca, speaking as a colonial governor, warned Bolivian voters not to vote for Evo Morales in the 2002 presidential election. It was won by Carlos De Losada with .06 percent more votes than Evo, 21.5 percent versus 20.9 percent.”

De Losado was later forced from office by indigenous opposition. A year earlier, in 2001, Paredo continued, “A left-right-center political coalition conspired to eliminate Morales from his position as deputy in the government.”

Dr. Paredo, who is also the former leader of the socialist party in Bolivia, PS1, said that “the Indigenous people, who make up 70 percent of Bolivia’s population, and their allies said no – enough discrimination against the indigenous people and enough exploitation of Bolivia’s natural resources.” Bolivia was forced to sell its tin to the United States at below market price through the end of World War II, and that oppressive trade policy continued for seven more years until 1952.

My own observations of Afro-Bolivians confirms Monica’s report in her book, “The Promise of Diversity: Afro-Bolivians, Indigenous, Whites, and Mestizos in the Struggle.” Many people, she wrote, said that enslavement didn’t end in Bolivia until 1953 because the mistreatment and inequality continued beyond Simon Bolivar’s emancipation decree of 1825, which was reversed by Gov. Andres de Santa Cruz in 1830. Enslavement was only formally abolished during the government of Isidoro Belzu (1848-1855).

Immediately afterwards, according to Monica, Afro-Bolivians worked like enslaved people until the revolution of 1952 and the 1953 agricultural reforms. Even today, she says, Afro-Bolivians are marginalized, isolated and not recognized by the government as Afro-Bolivians. The demand of the Afro-Bolivians that they be included in the last census was rejected by the government.

On Sunday, Dec. 18, Evo Morales became president-elect of Bolivia, winning 51 percent plus one vote in the first round of the election. “Colonialism and indigenous submission to white discrimination are over in Bolivia. Now begins the era of inclusion,” he announced triumphantly.

He had said before the election that his presidency “would be a nightmare for the United States.” This, I believe, is an allusion to his opposition to the coca eradication, neo-liberal privatization and the objective and subjective policies of racial and ethnic discrimination by the U.S. toward Bolivia.

The Congressional Black Caucus, TransAfrica and other African North American organizations have developed an active interest in African Latinos in Cuba, Venezuela, Colombia, Mexico and Brazil. These groups have sponsored visits by African Latinos to the U.S. and arranged meetings with government agencies and solidarity groups.

Delegations have traveled to these countries and met with community leaders and government representatives. Bolivia should now be added to the countries supported by the Congressional Black Caucus and all African North Americans.

Willie Thompson is emeritus professor of sociology, City College of San Francisco. Email him at willliemackthompson@msn.com


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