La Media Luna is burning. Santa Cruz is at the brink of civil war, is what I have heard more than once in Bolivia, this week. There is a Cabildo Today in the main cities of the area that makes up the Media Luna –with Santa Cruz taking the lion’s share of the media’s attention. Today, the Cristo Redentor Avenue
will host hundreds of thousands of cruzenos who will call for Autonomia
in defiance of Evo Morales’ government and his authoritarian
aspirations. There is no way around it, I am afraid. (I honestly hope
Evo’s government is a successful one and that Bolivia, through him and others may move in a constant path out of the situation it is in.)
But it is not going well for Morales as he gains control of the institutions of Bolivia.
His focus in getting the politics right has forgotten the skills needed
to run them. And in the meantime, opposition is mounting and forcing
him to tighten his grip and position –which in turn radicalises the
opposition, etc. The current stand-off centres around the dos tercios
(two thirds) that the constitution says is necessary in Congress to
change it –Morales wants a simple majority to give him the right to
re-election (sounds familiar? Try Fujimori, Menem and Chavez).
But the dos tercios is not the only thing in the mind of the masses in Santa Cruz,
today. They will be calling for Autonomy (and that is what all the
green and white flags in the city read). The main movers and shakers in
Santa Cruz,
it seems, is the Comite Civico (a club of rich landowners and
businessmen) linked to the political leaders of the region. They are
supported, nationally, by the police; but apposed by the military
(which is probably why Evo has called for one Head of both
institutions).
There is talk of
civil war and general social breakdown in the country. But it is not
clear who would actually fight. There are no guns in Bolivia. And the crowds gathering last night in Santa Cruz do not seem like the kind to take up arms.
Nevertheless the
situation is as close as it will get to breaking point. If Evo gets
away with his constitutional reform he will face fierce opposition and
support (radicalising the situation even more –is this possible?). And
he will certainly follow the same path of Fujimori, Menem and (soon)
Chavez. This never lasts. They are always kicked out. But in the
meantime, the path will lead to widespread impunity, arrogance and a
very dangerous detachment from what is socially necessary in favour of
what is politically savvy. With a more fierce opposition, he can be
certain that any of his policies, good or bad, will not survive; and
the revolution of Evo will die away (or at least be interrupted –Latin
Americans are famous for 180 degrees turns).
If Evo gives in, on
the other hand, he will face stronger opposition; strengthened by their
victory and the ranks of disillusioned supporters who will abandon him.
Can he give in, then?
An option might be to negotiate autonomy for the two thirds. Santa Cruz
has to recognise that Evo’s re-election is certainly a greater evil
than no autonomy. No re-election will force Evo and MAS to find a
successor; an alternative from within their ranks. No re-election will
foster democracy; it will move Bolivia in the direction of stable
government transitions (which is not what democracy is only about, but
in Bolivia it is certainly a start). In time, autonomy will be
negotiated peacefully; and it will come. It will take time, like it has
in Spain with Cataluña, but it will come. In th mean time, Santa Cruz
will enjoy a place in Bolivian political life, by right and not by
force.
Evo cannot give in
(or be seen to give in). He is politically savvy enough to know that,
He has been strengthened by a healthy (er) economy (which is in
superavit for the first time) and is being pushed and pulled by various
forces into an increasingly inflexible radical nationalistic discourse.
His options are
limited. The choice is with the traditional politicians. They need to
pick the right battle to fight. But also the choice of weapon. Bolivia
is not short of strong, respected and rational civil society
institutions that can act as interlocutors between the parties. These
have been strengthened by both local and international processes and
they should not be left aside.