Hanns Holger Rutz on Tue, 12 Nov 2019 00:14:27 +0100 (CET) |
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Re: <nettime> Evo Morales |
Maduro come next, to end the repressive regime in Venezuela. No tear for Morales from me and thirty million others. Have fun in your European armchair+cocktail "socialism". On 11/11/2019 23:49, Menno Grootveld wrote: > Hi there! This is not so much lazy reporting as incredibly overt > disinformation. > > You better read this: > > https://www.commondreams.org/news/2019/11/11/global-condemnation-appalling-coup-bolivia-military-forces-socialist-president-evo > > > Op 11-11-19 om 22:10 schreef Felix Stalder: >> [I don't know much about the situation in Bolivia, but reporting in the >> Western media seems incredibly lazy, portraying the situation as a >> liberal uprising against an anti-democratic leader. >> >> There is obviously much more context than that. Some of it is mentioned >> in the below interview. Another aspect is that just a week ago, Bolivia >> cancelled a very large project to produce lithium with a German company >> after local protests again the project. Though that also is probably >> more complex, because the German won the initial contract because they >> were they only ones willing to refine the Lithium locally, rather than >> simply export the raw material. Perhaps somebody with more direct >> knowledge can add more information. Felix ] >> >> >> >> https://www.democracynow.org/2019/11/11/evo_morales_bolivia_protests_military_coup >> >> >> >> >> Evo Morales was Bolivia’s first indigenous leader, was credited with >> lifting nearly a fifth of Bolivia’s population out of poverty since he >> took office in 2006. But he faced criticism from some of his former >> supporters for running for a third and then a fourth term. Evo Morales’s >> whereabouts are unknown. His home was ransacked Sunday. Mexico has >> offered Morales asylum. Hours before resigning, Morales had agreed to >> call for new elections, after the Organization of American States issued >> a report claiming there was, quote, “clear manipulation” in last month’s >> election results. According to the official results of last month’s >> election, Morales won 47% of the vote and just narrowly avoided a runoff >> election. But the OAS immediately questioned the election process, >> sparking mass street protests. Critics of the OAS say the global body >> did not provide any evidence of actual vote rigging. >> >> We go now to Washington, D.C., where we’re joined by Mark Weisbrot, >> co-director of the Center for Economic and Policy Research, his latest >> piece for The Nation headlined “The Trump Administration Is Undercutting >> Democracy in Bolivia.” Talk about the latest developments, the >> resignation of President Evo Morales, the first indigenous president of >> Bolivia. >> >> MARK WEISBROT: Well, this is a military coup. There’s no doubt about it >> now, after the head of the military told the president and vice >> president to resign and then they did. And I think it’s really terrible >> the way it’s been presented, because, from the beginning, you had that >> OAS press release, the day after the election, which hinted — or >> implied, actually, very strongly — that there was something wrong with >> the vote count, and they never presented any evidence at all. They >> didn’t presented it in that release. They didn’t present it in their >> next release. They didn’t present it in their preliminary report. And >> there’s really nothing in this latest so-called preliminary audit that >> shows that there was any fraud in this election. But it was repeated >> over and over again in all the media, and so it became kind of true. >> And, you know, if you look at the media, you don’t see anybody — you >> don’t see any experts, for example, saying that there was something >> wrong with the vote count. It’s really just that OAS observation >> mission, which was under a lot of pressure, of course, from Senator >> Rubio and the Trump administration to do this, because they wanted — >> they’ve wanted for some time to get rid of this government. >> >> AMY GOODMAN: And explain how the election went — Morales stopping the >> election count, resuming it — and then what kind of majority he needed >> to avoid a runoff. >> >> MARK WEISBROT: OK. So, this is very important, because this has been >> very badly described, I think, in most of the media. You have a quick >> count, which is not even the official count of the election, and it’s >> not binding. It’s not what determines the result. It’s just something >> that is done while the votes are being counted to let people know what’s >> going on at that time. And so, the quick count was interrupted, and when >> it resumed — and it was interrupted with Evo leading by about 7 >> percentage points. And when it came back, his margin increased. And if >> you read the press here, any of the articles, it’s reported as though >> something terribly suspicious happened. He didn’t have enough votes — he >> needed a 10-point margin in order to — a 10-point lead over the next >> runner-up in order to win in the first round, and he didn’t have that >> when the vote count, this quick count, was interrupted — or, the >> reporting was interrupted, I should say. And then, you know, he got it >> in the last 14 — last 16% of the votes counted. He reached 10%. But if >> you look at what was really — so, this was reported as a very suspicious >> thing. And this is what’s reported over and over again to make it look >> like something was wrong. >> >> But if you look at it, actually — actually, the whole vote count — you >> see there was a steady trend of Evo’s margin increasing almost from the >> beginning. And it didn’t change in the last 16%; it just continued >> because — and you can look at the areas that were coming in — these were >> rural and poor areas where Evo Morales had more support. That’s all that >> happened. This happens in elections. You can see this if you watch >> election returns in the U.S. So, there was never anything there. >> >> AMY GOODMAN: Several Latin American leaders have criticized the ouster >> of Evo Morales in Bolivia. This is Argentina’s President-elect Alberto >> Fernández. >> >> PRESIDENT-ELECT ALBERTO FERNÁNDEZ: [translated] What’s happening in >> Bolivia is that there’s a dominant class that will not resign themselves >> to losing power to the hands of a president who is the first Bolivian >> president that looks like Bolivians. That’s what’s happening. >> >> AMY GOODMAN: And British Labour Leader Jeremy Corbyn tweeted Sunday, “To >> see @evoespueble who, along with a powerful movement, has brought so >> much social progress forced from office by the military is appalling. I >> condemn this coup against the Bolivian people and stand with them for >> democracy, social justice and independence. So, if you can talk, Mark >> Weisbrot, about the role of the Bolivian military? And what about the >> Trump administration? >> >> MARK WEISBROT: Well, I think the most — you know, the Bolivian military >> very clearly said — I mean, before they did that, they said they weren’t >> going to intervene, in terms of the protests. But they very clearly — >> the head of the armed forces said that Evo should resign, right before >> he did that. And so it was a military coup. And Evo Morales is calling >> it that, of course. And there isn’t any doubt about it. The media hasn’t >> really mentioned it as much as a military coup, but it definitely is. >> >> In terms of the Trump administration, you can look at tweets and >> statements from Marco Rubio right before the votes were even counted, >> saying that there was going to be fraud, and, you know, making it clear >> that they didn’t want this government to be there. And so, yeah, I think >> that — I mean, it’s very obvious that they supported this coup. And it’s >> very obvious that they pressured the OAS, where the United States >> supplies 60% of the budget. >> >> And, you know, this is the problem. The media treats this OAS as though >> it’s really an independent arbiter here. And they do have electoral >> missions, and most of the time they’re clean, but they are not always. >> You know, in Haiti in 2011, for example, they reversed the results of a >> first-round presidential election without any statistical test, recount >> or any reason. It was completely political. And in 2000, they reversed >> their position, their report on the election, when the United States, as >> you know and you’ve reported on this show, wanted to cut off all >> international aid to Haiti and spent four years preparing for the coup >> of 2004. So, the OAS played a major role in that by changing their >> report on the election in Haiti. And so, I think this is a kind of a >> classic military coup supported by the United States. >> >> AMY GOODMAN: So, Mark Weisbrot, you have the CIA involvement in coups in >> Bolivia in 1952, in 1964, 1970, 1980. Would you add 2019 to that list? >> >> MARK WEISBROT: I would add it to the list. I mean, we don’t have the >> hard evidence of what they did. You know, it’s not like 2009 in >> Honduras, where Hillary Clinton wrote in her memoirs that she worked in >> the OAS, too, to prevent the elected president, who you’ve had on this >> show, from coming back to the country and to the presidency. But I think >> we’ll probably find out more later. But it’s just — it is very obvious >> that they supported this coup. >> >> >> > # distributed via <nettime>: no commercial use without permission > # <nettime> is a moderated mailing list for net criticism, > # collaborative text filtering and cultural politics of the nets > # more info: http://mx.kein.org/mailman/listinfo/nettime-l > # archive: http://www.nettime.org contact: nettime@kein.org > # @nettime_bot tweets mail w/ sender unless #ANON is in Subject: # distributed via <nettime>: no commercial use without permission # <nettime> is a moderated mailing list for net criticism, # collaborative text filtering and cultural politics of the nets # more info: http://mx.kein.org/mailman/listinfo/nettime-l # archive: http://www.nettime.org contact: nettime@kein.org # @nettime_bot tweets mail w/ sender unless #ANON is in Subject: