Info about subscribing or unsubscribing from this list is at the bottom of this 
message.
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~

http://www.thenation.com/doc.mhtml?i=20050530&s=palast

ECUADOR GETS CHAVEZ'D
By Greg Palast

The Nation
16 May 2005

George Bush has someone new to hate. Only twenty-four hours after
Ecuador's new president took his oath of office, he was hit by a
diplomatic cruise missile fired all the way from Lithuania by Condoleezza
Rice, then wandering about Eastern Europe spreading "democracy." Condi
called for "a constitutional process to get to elections," which came as a
bit of a shock to the man who'd already been constitutionally elected,
Alfredo Palacio.

What had Palacio done to get our Secretary of State's political knickers
in a twist? It's the oil--and the bonds. This nation of only 13 million
souls at the world's belly button is rich, sitting on 4.4 billion barrels
of known oil reserves, and probably much more. Yet 60 percent of its
citizens live in brutal poverty; a lucky minority earn the "minimum" wage
of $153 a month.

The obvious solution--give the oil money to the Ecuadoreans without
money--runs smack up against paragraph III-1 of the World Bank's 2003
Structural Adjustment Program Loan. The diktat is marked "FOR OFFICIAL USE
ONLY," which "may not be disclosed" without World Bank authorization.
TheNation.com has obtained a copy.

The secret loan terms require Ecuador to pay bondholders 70 percent of the
revenue received from any spike in the price of oil. The result: Ecuador
must give up the big bucks from the Iraq War oil price surge. Another 20
percent of the oil windfall is set aside for "contingencies" (i.e., later
payments to bondholders). The document specifies that Ecuador may keep
only 10 percent of new oil revenue for expenditures on social services.

I showed President Palacio the World Bank documents. He knew their terms
well. "If we pay that amount of debt," he told me, "we're dead. We have to
survive." He argued, with logic, "If we die, who is going to pay them?"

We met two weeks ago in the Carondelet Palace, where, on April 20, his
predecessor had disappeared out the back door to seek asylum in Brazil. A
crowd of 100,000 protesters had surrounded the building, seeking the
arrest of fugitive president Lucio Gutierrez.

"Sucio Lucio" (Dirty Lucio, as the graffiti tags him) had won election in
2002 promising to break away from the supposedly voluntary austerity plan
imposed by the World Bank. Then, within a month of taking office,
Gutierrez flew to Washington. There he held hands with George Bush (a
photo infamous in Quito), and US Treasury officials instructed him in the
financial facts of life. Lucio returned to Quito, reneged on his campaign
promises and tightened the austerity measures, including raising the price
of cooking gas. The public, after a dispirited delay, revolted. After
Lucio fled last month, the nation's congress recognized the vacancy in
Ecuador's Oval Office and filled it with the elected vice president, in
accordance with the Constitution.

Given the oil windfall, Palacio sees no need to follow Gutierrez's path to
economic asphyxiation. "It is impossible that they condemn us not to have
health, not to have education," he told me. He made it clear that handing
over 90 percent of his nation's new oil wealth would not stand.

That's not what the Bush Administration wanted to hear. Besides Condi's
attack, Palacio got the full "Chávez" treatment from the New York Times,
which ran the headline "Ecuador's New Chief Picks Cabinet; Leftist in
Economic Post" after Palacio's new finance minister announced Ecuador
would put social-services programs first ahead of payments to bondholders.
The Times said Palacio's views "ruffled some feathers" (whose, we don't
know) and that foreign powers questioned the "legitimacy" of his right to
office. Palacio smiled, "They don't say which ones."

Palacio seems an unlikely target of US official assaults. He comes off
like a cardiologist you'd meet at an AMA convention. That is, in fact,
what he is: a heart doctor who practiced in the United States for a
decade, a man outside politics, affiliated with no party, brought in by
Gutierrez to build a national health program. Hugo Chávez he is not:
Palacio is conservative, pro-market, pro-American, but his patient, his
nation, is in bad shape.

"Sick people are not going to produce anything," he said.

I knew he'd been taken aback by Rice's blast. Indeed, when an earlier
president was removed in a coup, the United States had insisted on the
vice president taking office. But, unlike Palacio, that vice president,
Gustavo Noboa, was a rightist who was happy to sign off on all World Bank
terms, including the devastating decision in January 2000 to make the US
dollar Ecuador's official currency. The radical free-market dollarization
plan led to collapse of the export market, decimation of payrolls and, for
those still working, a halving of real wages.

Palacio told me he "received the explanation from Ms. Condoleezza Rice,"
who reassured him she did not seek his removal. But reassurance apparently
has a price. The morning we met, Palacio announced he would maintain US
military bases in Ecuador (not a popular view) and would not object to
Plan Colombia, the US war on guerrillas dressed as a war on drugs. As a
physician, however, he did question chemical spraying of coca crops.

But on the oil money and bond payout he's holding his ground, and with
good reason. When the oil market went bust in the 1980s, so did Ecuador,
and its bonds sold at dimes on the dollar. Now Ecuador's debt sells at a
full face value, yielding windfall profits to speculators of as much as
500 percent for those who bought cheap.

Palacio doesn't object to paying off the bonds. The problem is that the
World Bank and IMF want the principal of the bonds paid down early, a rare
and financially suspect demand to make on any nation.

Who are these guys who hold the bonds? "We don't know who they are, and
that's terrible," the president told me. What's terrible, says a United
Nations expert who cannot be named, is that Palacio does know who they
are: the old oligarchs who originally stripped the nation's banks of
assets in the 1980s, fled to Miami and now hold a mortgage on the nation.
Palacio's plan to move some of the oil money to social services threatens
these bondholders' windfall.

A closer look at the Structural Adjustment Program suggests that the World
Bank may not be putting Ecuador's interests first. Paragraph III-2
requires electricity rates to rise to double the average price charged in
the United States, far above production costs. This is quite a boon to the
Ecuadorean electricity suppliers such as Noble Energy of Houston and Duke
Power of the Carolinas.

Outside the presidential palace, indigenous women in bowler hats and
pigtails chanted, "ˇFuera todos! ˇFuera todos!" Everyone out. As far as
they are concerned, every one of the seven presidents who have entered
office in the past nine years has sold them out to the bondholders, to the
oil companies, to the World Bank and its austerity punishments. To them,
Palacio is just another in a long line of disappointments.

I asked the president what he would do if the World Bank and the Bush
Administration nix his request for Ecuador to keep an extra tiny
percentage of its oil money. Mindful that no Ecuadorean president since
1996 has served out his term, Palacio told me simply: "There is no way.
There is no other way. These people have to listen to us."

----------

Hear and view Palast's special report from Ecuador this week on Democracy
Now!

Greg Palast is the author of The Best Democracy Money Can Buy.  View more
photos and video of his investigations in Ecuador and South America at
http://www.gregpalast.com/ecuador.html

_____________________________

Note: This message comes from the peace-justice-news e-mail mailing list of 
articles and commentaries about peace and social justice issues, activism, etc. 
 If you do not regularly receive mailings from this list or have received this 
message as a forward from someone else and would like to be added to the list, 
send a blank e-mail with the subject "subscribe" to [EMAIL PROTECTED] 
or you can visit:
http://lists.enabled.com/mailman/listinfo/peace-justice-news  Go to that same 
web address to view the list's archives or to unsubscribe.

E-mail accounts that become full, inactive or out of order for more than a few 
days will be deleted from this list.

FAIR USE NOTICE: In accordance with Title 17 U.S.C. Section 107, the 
information in this e-mail is distributed without profit to those who have 
expressed a prior interest in receiving it for research and educational 
purposes.  I am making such material available in an effort to advance 
understanding of environmental, political, human rights, economic, democracy, 
scientific, and social justice issues, etc. I believe this constitutes a 'fair 
use' of copyrighted material as provided for in the US Copyright Law.

Reply via email to