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Foreign Correspondent

Being the Ongoing Tales, Triumphs, Struggles (mostly struggles) and Occasional Adventures of Freelance Foreign Correspondent Shawn Gerald Blore, based in Rio de Janeiro

Sunday, July 17, 2005

Links to recent Articles

Foreign Correspondent

Finally got around to posting some of my recent work on the website. For all who interested here in my recent newspaper work. Still have to find a way to post my radio stuff. And I have an award or two not in the list (he brags) and there are some magazine articles I'd like to get up. I did a big series for EnRoute on what makes a city civilized. All very tongue in cheek, then I find the World Bank using it in presentations, and academics quoting me in courses. Got to get a link up to that soon.

Anyway, here's the links...

BRAZIL SHOWS SIGNS OF CRACKING DOWN ON FRONTIER JUSTICE
By Shawn Blore | The San Francisco Chroniclel

Tacit approval of urban death squads may be changing

RIO DE JANEIRO -- Nova Iguacu, Brazil -- As if it were yesterday, Nilmo, a pizza deliveryman, recalls the first person he shot to death nine years ago.

http://www.shawnblore.com/Pieces/SF%20Chronicle/SF%20Death%20Squad.htm


DESPITE THE CALM, REFORM PRESSURES CHALLENGE BOLIVIA
By Shawn Blore | The Globe and Mail

LA PAZ, BOLIVIA– The blockades around Bolivia's capital have been down for more than a week, and things have returned to relative calm after violent protests overturned the government of Carlos Mesa this month

http://www.shawnblore.com/Pieces/Globe/Bolivia%20June%2028.htm



BOLIVIAN CITY LEARNS PRICE OF PROTEST
By Shawn Blore | The Globe and Mail

EL ALTO, BOLIVIA– - With a fragile truce declared in the protests after the inauguration of new President Eduardo Rodriguez, life in the poor Bolivian city of El Alto has begun an uneasy return to normality.

http://www.shawnblore.com/Pieces/Globe/Bolivia%20June%2014.htm


POLITICAL TURMOIL PARALYZES BOLIVIA
By Shawn Blore | The Globe and Mail

SANTA CRUZ, BOLIVIA– Planes were grounded, roads blocked, and bussed paralysed in Bolivia as the congress of this troubled Andean nation began meeting in the former capital city of Sucre to choose a successor to outgoing President Carlos Mesa.

http://www.shawnblore.com/Pieces/Globe/Bolivia%20June%2010.htm




A NONCHALANT KILLER DEFENDS RIO-STYLE JUSTICE
By Shawn Blore | The Globe and Mail

But vigilantes provoke Brazil's outrage after recent massacre of innocents

RIO DE JANEIRO -- The first man he killed was riding a bicycle. "I had been warned, so I had my gun, with a newspaper over top, like this." The man demonstrates a nonchalant squat on the concrete stoop of his modest house in the Baixada Fluminense, the ring of poor industrial cities surrounding Rio de Janeiro. "When the guy rode up, I shot him."

http://www.shawnblore.com/Pieces/Globe/Death%20SquAD.htm



BRAZILIAN SUPERSTAR ENJOYS DOUBEL BILL AS CULTURE MINISTER
By Shawn Blore |

No stranger to political controversy, singer relishes role of artist as outsider.

RRIO DE JANEIRO -- Gilberto Gil emerges with guitar in hand stage right, pirouettes twice on the way to the microphone and begins a bossa nova version of John Lennon's Imagine. At 62 years of age and sporting slightly shaggy dreadlocks, the Brazilian musical superstar is simultaneously touring in support of a new album and directing policy as his country's Minister of Culture.

http://www.shawnblore.com/Pieces/Globe/Brazil/GilbertoGil.htm

Thursday, July 14, 2005

Bolivia - Worth the Money?

Foreign Correspondent
BOLIVIA - WORTH THE MONEY??

As it turned out, the Bolivians went and settled their constitutional crisis peacefully. No civil insurrection. No war. Only one dead person. Great for them. Crap for visiting journalists. In the end though, things turned out OK for me too. I managed to interview the head of the opposition movement Evo Morales, and most of the other key political leaders in La Paz. With that work I was able to sell a total of three pieces to the Globe and Mail. I also did my debut as a CBC radio reporter. Radio pieces are fun to put together, but at CBC rates it's simply not worth the effort. They pay US$55 a hit. Considering that newsgathering and editing for 1"20s piece will run to from 5-10 hours, you're looking at less than minimum wage. The rate apparently doubles if you're in a war zone. The live 5 minute chat from the Current (a national CBC radio show) is on the other hand remarkably well paid. C$100 a minute. No editing involved. You just have to be there and know what you're talking about. The Globe pays its usual paltry US$250 (bad, but standard for papers). And I managed to sell a short radio doco on Evo Morales to the NPR show LatinoUSA. Between all of that I actually managed to pay my expenses and turn a small profit on the Bolivia trip. And I now know the country and the political players for when the next crisis hits.

Am now trying to sell magazine pieces on the country. No one's interested in anything but Iraq, but trust me, the world will wake up and discover Bolivia...or rather, be forced to wake up...

Also trying to interest the world on the decline and fall of President Lula. Considering he was a media darling just two years ago you'd think the world would be more interested that his government has been revealed to be a common pack of corrupt plundering thieves...

Bolivia Update

Bolivia Update
So Bolivia....

Wound up stranded in Santa Cruz. Attempting to get the fuck out of Santa Cruz made my way to the military airport, where I found out the army planed to lock up the capital tight starting that night. The armed forces looked set to support the transfer of power to Hormano Vaca Diez, a man roundly despised by the vast majority of the Bolivian population, a man from non other than Santa Cruz.

The shut down of airports and military machinations was enough for a story for the Globe, who under deputy foreign editor Guy Nicholson was taking a lively interest in South America. The deputy deputy Linda Hossie was also keen, well-informed and helpful. I'll post a link to that article as soon as I post it on my website.

In the meantime, events were happening elsewhere in Bolivia. I summarized those events in a newspaper article, one that was never published because a)it was a bit too much like a wire piece and b) I filed it late saturday; the Globe has no Sunday edition, and by MOnday it was stale-dated (The SF Chronicle, my other string said it was too wire-like. They're probably right)

Anyway, I've pasted it below because it explains what happened while I was forced to dawdle in Bolivia's hot Amazon lowlands.


BEGIN ARTICLE
Santa Cruz, Bolivia
The Andean mountain republic of Bolivia came to within hours of a civil war, before backing away late Thursday night. In the end, it was the death of a single protesting miner that made the difference.

The constitutional crisis in the Andean mountain nation began June 6 when President Carlos Mesa tendered his resignation, citing a lack of support in the Bolivian Congress and escalating street protests in the capital city La Paz as proof that he was no longer able to govern.

According to the Bolivian constitution, the man next the line of succession was the head of the Senate Hormando Vaca Diez. A rich landowner from the oil-rich region of Santa Cruz region, Vaca Diez could count on the support of Bolivia`s two rightist political parties and much of the country’s middle class, but he was despised by the country’s indigenous peoples and labour unions.

The president of Bolivia’s powerful coca growers union Evo Morales declared that he would not accept Vaca Diez as president under any circumstances.

Despite this, the Bolivian congress, meeting in the historic city of Sucre in order to avoid the protests in the capital, looked set to elect Mr. Vaca Diez president. Mr. Vaca Diez spent the afternoon in a celebratory lunch with his family and members of his own Santa Cruz parliamentary faction. Just before 3pm on June 9, Mr. Vaca Diez gave an interview to a local television station in Sucre in which he said that he already felt himself to be president.

In the capital, the chief of the armed forces, Admiral Luis Aranda Granados, appeared at a news conference to explain that security measures including troops on the streets and at the airport were being taken to ensure the stability and continuity of constitutional rule in Bolivia. The military, the Admiral stated, "will respect the will of Congress," in effect backing Mr. Vaca Diez’ bid for president.

"As long as there is no break with the constitution and no break with democracy, the
armed forces will remain the supervisors of this process, " the Admiral said.

In Mr. Vaca Diez oil-rich home province of Santa Cruz, alarmed citizens began preparing themselves for the worst. ¨We expect that the Indians will come down to invade us,¨ said resident Jairo Sanchez. ¨But have arms. We know how to welcome Indians.¨

At the Santa Cruz military airport, duty officer Ernar Cabrora said that the armed forces had received orders to remain on high alert, adding that the moment the Bolivian congress elected Hormano Vaca Diez president, the military planned to move in force into the streets of La Paz to put down protests and ¨support the constitutional order.¨

Then around 4pm groups of protesting miners attempted to break through a government roadblocks to get into the city of Sucre and block the Congress from meeting. Bands of angry miners, many of them armed with sticks of dynamite, had been protesting in La Paz for weeks

At an army blockade outside the city of Sucre, one mining leader was killed when soldiers opened fire on a bus that attempted to run the blockade. The death was the first in nearly four weeks of protests.

Some dozens of other miners managed to reach the center of Sucre and began protesting and launching dynamite sticks in the historic Plaza 25 de Mayo, outside the building where the congress planned to meet.

At that point, the Bolivian armed forces began to reconsider their support for the would-be president. Mr. Vaca Diez was taken to the Sucre army headquarters and remained there for nearly six hours of tense negotiations.

Finally, around 10pm, Mr. Vaca Diez re-appeared to announce that he intended to renounce his right to the presidency. The congress convened, and shortly before midnight, Mr. Vaca Diez and the second in line of succession, the equally controversial President of the Chamber of Deputies Mario Cossio, both formally renounced their rights to Bolivia’s highest office.

The head of the supreme court, Harvard-educated Justice Eduardo Rodriguez was then sworn in as president. Members of Congress including a very unhappy looking Mr. Vaca Diez then joined with the new president in singing Bolivia’s national anthem.

In Mr. Vaca Diez power base of Santa Cruz there was anger at his renunciation. “It was totally unconstitutional, a result of force and pressure and anti-democratic, ” said Lucio Gonzalez, a law professor in the city of Santa Cruz. “I think they didn’t want him because they will never accept a president who is cruzeño (from Santa Cruz).”

But for other Santa Cruz residents, Mr. Vaca Diez’ resignation came as a relief. “I seriously thought we were heading for a civil war,” said shop-owner Pablo Ortiz. “Now we have some time, we’ll have new elections, and we can begin a dialogue again with all parts of Bolivia.”

In the capital La Paz, reaction was less jubilant. Indian groups held a large rally in the Plaza San Salvador, a large square in the center of the city. Indigenous leaders at the rally vowed to continue with blockades and protests until the new government agrees to nationalize the country’s oil and gas industries. Leaders of the Bolivian Workers Federation of Miners, one of Bolivia’s two main miner’s unions, also vowed to continue the struggle until the government agrees to nationalization.

The other main miner’s union, the Cooperative of Bolivian Miners, held a march in honor of their fallen comrade, and then began departing the capital for their home base in the city of Oruro. Throughout La Paz, campesinos who had come to the city to protest could be seen departing, banners furled, clothes and other possessions carried in large nylon packs on their backs.

Despite the lessening of tensions, however, vast and dangerous political differences remain unresolved in this poor South American nation.

In the east of the country, the oil rich province of Santa Cruz is still demanding greater autonomy, the better to exploit its oil and gas wealth. Santa Cruz is lowland, Amazonian in climate, inhabited by people who have few ties to Indian culture, and take pride in their international outlook and their modern work ethic. ¨This is the other Bolivia, said Jairo Sanchez. ¨Eastern Bolivia. Here everything functions. Here people know how to work.¨

In contrast, the Western highlands or altiplano is home to a much larger population, the majority of indigenous descent, most of whom look at Santa Cruz oil and gas reserves as a precious national patrimony that should be used to reduce their abject poverty.

“What the oil oligarchs in Santa Cruz can’t see is that that oil wealth belongs to us, to the indigenous people of Bolivia. It must be used intelligently, to transform Bolivia into a modern industrial country, a country that is fair to its workers and indigenous people” said Hebert Choque Taeque, the general secretary of the Bolivian Workers Federation of Miners.

Just after his swearing in, Bolivia’s new president Eduardo Rodriguez stated that he has no mandate to make changes to Bolivia’s oil and gas sector. His only role is to ensure stability until new elections can be called. Questions about the nationalization of the country’s natural resources must be left to a new elected parliament.

The question is whether Bolivia’s restive indigenous people and powerful miners’ union will allow the new president the luxury of breathing space.