https://www.newsclick.in/Bolivia-Coup-Evo-Morales-Worldwide-Condemnation
<https://www.newsclick.in/Bolivia-Coup-Evo-Morales-Worldwide-Condemnation>
*Coup in Bolivia Rejected Worldwide*
<https://www.newsclick.in/Bolivia-Coup-Evo-Morales-Worldwide-Condemnation>

President Evo Morales, Vice-President Álvaro García Linera and other
government authorities resigned amid escalation of violence by the
right-wing opposition.

*Zoe PC* <https://www.newsclick.in/author/Zoe%20PC>

*12 Nov 2019*



*[image: Evo Morales]
<https://www.newsclick.in/sites/default/files/2019-11/evo-morales-alvaro.jpg>*

*Evo Morales, Alvaro García Linera and other government authorities were
pressured into resigning on Sunday amid increased violence and provocation
against them and members of their party.*

*Political parties, politicians, leaders of people’s movements and
academics have sharply condemned the civic-military coup carried out
yesterday [November 10] against the government of Bolivian president Evo
Morales. Morales and his vice-president Álvaro García Linera, as well as
ministers and other members of his government, were cornered into resigning
after the right-wing opposition scaled up acts of violence and intimidation
against them and supporters of the Movement Towards Socialism (MAS) and
their family members.*

João Pedro Stedile, member of the National Board of the Landless Rural
Workers’ Movement (MST) of Brazil, termed what happened yesterday in
Bolivia as “the practical application of what we read in the book ‘Hybrid
Wars’ [by Andrew Korybko], which is the strategy of US capital to overthrow
governments. They already tried to apply this in Ukraine, Venezuela,
Colombia, Peru, and Ecuador.”

Monica Bruckmann, academic and researcher at the Federal University of Rio
de Janeiro, spoke at the Peoples’ BRICS Summit and contextualised what
happened in Bolivia as part of the crisis of neoliberal capitalism. She
explained, “The neoliberal project does not have the conditions to maintain
itself in these times. The right-wing is increasingly nervous and
desperate. What happened yesterday in Bolivia is a return to the old style
military coups of the 20th century.”

Leftist academic Noam Chomsky and Marxist intellectual and director of the
Tricontinental Institute for Social Research Vijay Prashad decried
<https://peoplesdispatch.org/2019/11/09/we-stand-against-the-coup-in-bolivia-statement-from-noam-chomsky-and-vijay-prashad/>
the
ongoing coup and highlighted the role of the US two days before Morales
resigned. They highlighted that “the coup is driven by the Bolivian
oligarchy, who are angered by the fourth election loss by their parties to
the Movement for Socialism. The oligarchy is fully supported by the United
States government, which has long been eager to remove Morales and his
movement from power. For over a decade, the US embassy’s Center of
Operations in La Paz has articulated the fact that it has two plans – Plan
A, the coup; Plan B, assassination of Morales. This is a serious breach of
the UN Charter and of all international obligations.”

Cuban President Miguel Diaz Canel also expressed his solidarity with Evo
and the Bolivian people and rejected the coup. He wrote on Twitter
<https://twitter.com/DiazCanelB/status/1193869578369191936?s=20> “A coup in
the heart of democracy and of the people of Our America in Bolivia. How and
who coordinated against the only Bolivian government that worked in favor
of the humble? Legality has been broken and the physical integrity of Evo,
other leaders and the Bolivian people must be safeguarded.”

The Communist Party of India (Marxist) highlighted the fact that the coup
in Bolivia was a continuation of similar efforts against progressive
governments in countries such as Brazil and Venezuela. It expressed its
solidarity with Morales and the MAS.

Argentine human rights defender and Nobel Prize winner Adolfo Pérez
Esquivel wrote
<https://twitter.com/PrensaPEsquivel/status/1193864511868088320?s=20> “The
coup d’état in Bolivia is an attack against all democracies in the world.
Bolivians do not benefit from the violence; who benefits is the US, OAS,
and the right-wing governments, the accomplices of what happened, who are
incapable of coexisting with a just, educated and sovereign Bolivia.”

Social movements, trade unions and platforms in Latin America have also
voiced their indignation in the wake of the coup. Mobilisations in
solidarity with Evo and the Bolivian people and against the coup have been
organised or will be held in Mexico, Argentina, Venezuela, Brazil and Cuba.

MST leader Stedile emphasised the need for mobilisation to support Evo both
in Bolivia and across the continent, “I hope that the people of Bolivia
rise up and put an end to these terrorist practices, financed by the
Government of the US and with support from the other fascists that we have
here in Latin America as it was explicitly evident from the praise that
Bolsonaro expressed to the coup supporters…We as peoples movements in Latin
America and Brazil, must give all of our solidarity and mobilise.”
*RIGHT-WING VIOLENCE CONTINUES*

The coup violence has not stopped with the resignations, which was the
central demand of the opposition following their allegations of fraud
<https://peoplesdispatch.org/2019/11/02/bolivian-right-wing-activates-electoral-fraud-contingency-plan-against-morales/>
in
the elections held on October 20. Coup supporters continue to threaten,
intimidate and incite violence against members of MAS and members of the
government. President Evo Morales denounced
<https://twitter.com/evoespueblo/status/1193855292615864321?s=20> on Monday
November 11, “The coup supporters attacked my house and my sister’s house,
they burned homes, made death threats to ministers and their children and
they humiliated a female mayor
<https://peoplesdispatch.org/2019/11/07/bolivian-opposition-carries-out-racist-misogynist-attacks-against-government-supporters/>,
now they lie and try to blame us for the chaos and violence that they
provoked. Bolivia and the world are witnesses to the coup.”

On Sunday, right-wing opposition forces burned the Wiphala flag,
<https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=O9f1Rij8bkI> which represents the
Indigenous people of the Andes and became an official symbol of the
Plurinational State of Bolivia in 2008. The burning is a testament to the
racist, colonial and classist nature of the coup.

While the situation in Bolivia is one of the most critical in the
continent’s recent history, vice-president Álvaro García Linera’s words
from 2016 offer wisdom and inspiration:

“We have difficult times ahead, but for a revolutionary, the difficult
times are our force. We live from this, from the difficult, we are
strengthened from this, from the difficult times. Were we not those who
came from below? Are we not the persecuted, the tortured, the marginalised,
of the times of neoliberalism? The golden decade on the continent has not
been free. It has been a struggle of you all, from below, from the trade
unions, from the university, from the neighborhoods that has given place to
our revolutionary cycle. It did not fall from the sky, this first wave. We
have in our bodies the traces and the injuries of struggle from the 80s and
90s. And if today, provisionally, temporarily, we have to continue to the
struggles of the 80s, of the 90s, of the 2000s, welcome. This is what
revolutionaries are for.

To struggle, win, fall, get back up, struggle, win, fall, get back up.
Until our lives are over, this is our destiny.”


*Courtesy: Peoples Dispatch,
<https://peoplesdispatch.org/2019/11/11/coup-in-bolivia-rejected-worldwide/>*

*Original published date:*

*11 Nov 2019*

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