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Impatient With Democracy 
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Latin America Is Growing 
Impatient With Democracy

June 24, 2004
 By JUAN FORERO 



 

ILAVE, Peru - On a morning in April, people in this
normally placid spot in Peru's southeastern highlands burst
into a town council meeting, grabbed their mayor, dragged
him through the streets and lynched him. The killers,
convinced the mayor was on the take and angry that he had
neglected promises to pave a highway and build a market for
vendors, also badly beat four councilmen. 

The beating death of the mayor may seem like an isolated
incident in an isolated Peruvian town but it is in fact a
specter haunting elected officials across Latin America. A
kind of toxic impatience with the democratic process has
seeped into the region's political discourse, even a thirst
for mob rule that has put leaders on notice. 

In the last few years, six elected heads of state have been
ousted in the face of violent unrest, something nearly
unheard of in the previous decade. A widely noted United
Nations survey of 19,000 Latin Americans in 18 countries in
April produced a startling result: a majority would choose
a dictator over an elected leader if that provided economic
benefits. 

Analysts say that the main source of the discontent is
corruption and the widespread feeling that elected
governments have done little or nothing to help the 220
million people in the region who still live in poverty,
about 43 percent of the population. 

"Latin America is paying the price for centuries of
inequality and injustice, and the United States really
doesn't have a clue about what is happening in the region,"
said Riordan Roett, director of Latin American studies at
Johns Hopkins University. 

"These are very, very fragile regimes," he added.
"Increasingly, there's frustration and resentment. The rate
of voting is going down. Blank ballots are increasing. The
average Latin American would prefer a very strong
government that produces a physical security and economic
security, and no government has been able to do that." 

These at-risk governments stretch thousands of miles from
the Caribbean and Central America through the spine of the
Andes to the continent's southern cone, and increasingly
the problems associated with weak governments are spilling
beyond Latin America and affecting United States interests
in the region. 

"We're confronted with large increase in illegal
migration," Mr. Roett said, "more drugs pouring into the
American market to meet an insatiable demand, and the
potential for regime failure that could spread in the
region and bring serious threats to our security position
in the hemisphere." 

Among the weakest states is Guatemala, which struggles with
paramilitary groups, youth gangs and judicial impunity and
has become a crossroads for the smuggling of people and
drugs to the United States. 

Several other governments are fragile at best and
susceptible to popular unrest that could further weaken and
topple them. These include the interim administration of
Prime Minister G�rard Latortue in Haiti, which took power
after a popular revolt this year, and President Carlos Mesa
in Bolivia, who took power after such a revolt last year. 

The most unpredictable and volatile region is the Andes.


Venezuela remains deeply polarized, as foes of President
Hugo Ch�vez plot to oust him while he continues with what
he has called a "peaceful revolution" that includes a
radical redistribution of the nation's oil wealth. Peru,
Ecuador and Bolivia are buffeted by nearly continuous
protests from indigenous groups and other once-forgotten
classes that are demanding to be heard. 

Their struggles vividly demonstrate an issue that animates
strife in nearly all Latin America - the gap between the
haves and have-nots of money and power that makes the
region the world's most inequitable, and increasingly the
most politically polarized. 

Even in Argentina, once Latin America's most developed
country, President N�stor Kirchner has warned of threats
against his government and his life as he struggles to root
out corruption, repair democratic institutions and lift the
country out of an economic implosion in 2001 that prompted
the fall of four presidents in two weeks. 

In Argentina and elsewhere, the most immediate cause for
alarm is the short-lived nature of individual governments
and the havoc it can create. But the larger concern is that
roiling instability is eroding the foundations of
democracy. 

In this climate, even competence has become cause for
concern - the popular impulse being to find something that
works and to stick with it, whether arrived at
democratically or not. In Colombia, where a stable and
popular government has made new strides in beating back a
40-year-old Marxist insurgency and reviving the economy,
the temptation has been to extend extrajudicial authority
to President �lvaro Uribe's government and even change the
constitution to permit his re-election. 

But, then, the pool of competent leaders from which to
chose has proved limited. Having lost faith in President
Alejandro Toldeo, Peruvians, opinion polls show, look to a
return of Alberto K. Fujimori, the elected authoritarian
who fled after corruption charges and lives in Japan, or to
Alan Garc�a, another former president, who was exiled in
disgrace after a tenure considered one of the most corrupt
and incompetent in Peru's recent history. 

Their fortunes are being revived with the feeling,
increasingly common in Peru and elsewhere, that only a
caudillo, the classic Latin strongman, can solve the
longstanding problems that plague the region. 

The United Nations report, also drawn from interviews with
current and former presidents, political analysts and
cultural and economic figures, showed that 56 percent of
those asked said economic progress was more important than
democracy. 

"Democracy today is broad, but it's not deep," said Larry
Birns, director of the Council on Hemispheric Affairs, a
Washington-based policy group. "It's broad in that the
leadership talks about it, it's a buzzword. But the danger
is that the more they talk about it the more skeptical the
population becomes because they see a great deal of
rhetoric but the standard of living of the impoverished
hasn't improved." 

The view is common among the common man, particularly in
poverty-stricken corners. 

"I believe in an authoritarian government, if it works,"
said Daniel Vargas, 24, a university student from Ilave
whose father was accused with six others of having
orchestrated the lynching of the mayor, Fernando Cirilo
Robles. "They do this in other countries and it works. Look
at Cuba, that works. Look at Pinochet in Chile, that
worked." 

The United Nations report noted that the promise of
prosperity offered by democracy has gone unfulfilled.
Economic growth per capita, it said, "did not vary in a
significant manner" in Latin America in the last 20 years,
even though analysts had predicted that growth would pick
up as governments flung open the doors to free-market
changes prescribed by Washington and the International
Monetary Fund. That institution has instead come to be
considered a b�te noire in this and many other developing
parts of the world. 

A slump in local economies that has lasted years has only
deepened the discontent with governments already widely
scorned as corrupt and overly bureaucratic. Predictions
that economic growth is on the way - economists say Latin
America will record a 4 percent growth rate this year after
a long slump - have done little to quell the
dissatisfaction. 

The main reason: recent growth has not been widely shared,
but concentrated in isolated pockets, usually attached to
multinational investments that employ few people. 

Peru is a good example. It has the region's most impressive
economic growth, on paper, with the economy expanding about
4 percent a year since Mr. Toledo was elected in 2001. But
that growth has not filtered down, and the deep
disillusionment that failure has inspired is not lost on
Mr. Toledo, whose approval rating is mired below 10
percent. 

"What good is an impressive growth rate?" he said in a
speech in May. "Wall Street applauds us, but in the
streets, no. So what good is it?" 

The poverty and inequality that breed unrest are never more
apparent than in this desolate region, 13,000 feet above
sea level, that hugs Lake Titicaca and the Bolivian border.


Unlike Lima, prosperous and modern, the hamlets and farms
here provide a meager life. "What we have here is a
subhuman life," said Te�filo Challo, 27, a farmer. "We try
to make it and work from sunrise to sundown just to
survive. But we win nothing. No services, no health care,
nothing." 

Like many in Latin America who feel a disconnect from their
government, the people here are Aymar� Indians. They form
part of Latin America's forgotten classes, often indigenous
or otherwise nonwhite, who increasingly promise political
upheaval. 

"The government only pays attention to those who have
power," said N�stor Chambi, an indigenous leader and
agronomist. "Rights are not for the poor. They are for the
rich, by the rich, and so the people here have gotten
tired." 

The popular discontent with a central government seen as
aloof, unresponsive and subservient to powerful interests
was only amplified as Ilave's political, business and
church leaders raised concerns about suspected corruption
and incompetence by Mayor Robles, to no effect. 

That Mr. Robles is Aymara himself, like practically all the
townspeople here, did not matter. People here and
throughout the region charge that politicians are corrupted
by power and a long tradition in which politics is used as
a spoils system for personal enrichment. 

Elected officials do not remember their people or keep
their promises, people here complained. Gregorio Ticona,
the first Aymar� elected to Congress, faces corruption
charges. The president of the regional government, David
Jim�nez, was also charged in May with corruption. 

"Institutions have no more credibility," said Percy Fl�rez,
a municipal official in Ilave. 

Mr. Robles, a university-educated social scientist who
belonged to a far-left fringe party, had political
adversaries who agitated for his resignation, namely the
lieutenant mayor, Alberto Sandoval, who has also been
charged in Mr. Robles' death. 

But the political campaigning, mounting protests and
hyperbolic reports in local radio stations, which fomented
the unrest, did little to attract attention outside Ilave. 

Protests reached a fever pitch after an April 2 meeting
where residents demanded to know details of the town's
finances, only to be shouted down by Mr. Robles's
lieutenants. 

"People wanted to ask where the money was, but they did not
let them speak," said Mr. Fl�rez. 

The mayor tried to diffuse tensions by leaving town. But
when he returned on April 26 for a town council meeting at
his house a mob awaited. 

Mr. Robles fled with four councilmen, who sought refuge in
an adjacent house, but were hunted down and dragged out
into the dusty street. 

"They threw rocks at the windows and we were so afraid,"
said Arnaldo Chambilla, a councilman, from his hospital
bed. "They pulled me out, they beat me. I do not remember
after that." 

Another councilman, Edgar Lope, recalled begging his
attackers. 

"I kneeled and said, `Please forgive me,' " he said. "At
that point, I had given myself to the Lord." 

http://www.nytimes.com/2004/06/24/international/americas/24PERU.html?ex=1089104920&ei=1&en=1d44aff10e3f3fe2


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