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Subject: CNN.com - Bolivia declares emergency over protests - April 8, 2000


http://cnn.com/2000/WORLD/americas/04/08/bolivia.emergency.reut/index.html
Title: CNN.com - Bolivia declares emergency over protests - April 8, 2000
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Bolivia declares emergency over protests

protesters
Protesters protect their faces from tear gas fired by national police who dispersed thousands of demonstrators in Cochabamba, Bolivia, during protests against the raise in water rates  

April 8, 2000
Web posted at: 6:53 p.m. EDT (2253 GMT)

LA PAZ, Bolivia (Reuters) -- Bolivia's government put the landlocked Andean nation of 8 million people under a state of emergency Saturday, after it was rocked for a week by protests over pending waterworks projects and legislation.

"We see it as our obligation, in the common best interest, to decree a state of emergency to protect law and order," President Hugo Banzer said in a message delivered by Information Minister Ronald MacLean at the government palace.

The state of emergency giving Banzer special powers to deploy police and the military will be in place for 90 days. It was announced Friday night to avoid damaging "the efforts for social dialogue" and assure "that the great effort towards economic reactivation is not set back further," MacLean read.

The move has to be ratified by Congress, in which the ruling party controls the majority.

Bolivia has been hit by protests in the central city of Cochabamba over a $200 million waterworks project that promises to hike drinking-water rates.

Meanwhile, roadblocks have been set up on several national highways by peasants pressuring the government to relent on a bill currently being debated in Congress that could force them to pay for water they currently obtain for free.

On top of the waterworks demonstrations, university students in the central city of Sucre -- home to the nation's Supreme Court -- have staged a hunger strike against a "persona non grata" from the southern Tarija province civic committee who was received by the president.

And in the capital city La Paz, various police units have set off a mutiny over low pay.

Mobilization of police and military began early Saturday with a raid on the headquarters of the Bolivian Workers' Central Union (COB). The wives of 13 police officers who were on a hunger strike in search of better wages for their husbands were hauled away.

police
Thousands of soldiers and police were mobilized to control public order after President Hugo Banzer declared a state of siege in Bolivia on Saturday  

And at least 10 civic leaders were arrested in Cochabamba, the scene of violent protests during the week against the new waterworks project, which could raise water rates by 35 percent.

MacLean confirmed that at least 20 people had been arrested. Government Minister Walter Guiteras told reporters those detained would be confined, although he did not mention where.

"The chaos has begun to spread ... just at the moment in which we are beginning an important economic reactivation plan," said the dictum from Banzer, the fourth consecutive democratically elected president to be forced into declaring a state of siege.

The government is refusing to climb down on the $200 million waterworks contract in Cochabamba with Aguas del Tunari -- a consortium led by London-based International Water Limited (IWL) -- saying it must guarantee the rights of foreign investors. IWL is jointly owned by Italian utility Edison and U.S. company Bechtel Enterprise Holdings.

Tear gas was fired Friday at thousands of demonstrators in downtown Cochabamba, and peasant leader Felipe Quispe promised the protests would intensify over the weekend.

A large military operation has been put into action to clear the highways in five of the nation's nine provinces.

The roads have been blocked for the last five days by peasants railing against the water bill they claim will bring large-scale private utility projects and put a price tag on their water.

Waldo Albarracin, the influential president of the local human-rights assembly, said he saw no justification for declaring a state of emergency.

"Now we wait and see if the situation does not deteriorate into human-rights abuses," Albarracin told reporters.

Copyright 2000 Reuters. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten, or redistributed.



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