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Indybay Feature

Bolivian President Mesa Resigns

by Narco News
President Carlos Mesa of Bolivia has resigned. América once again lives
days of immediate history. Jean Friedsky, reporting from the streets of
La Paz, writes in the Narcosphere:
June 6, 2005
Please Distribute Widely

Dear Colleague,

President Carlos Mesa of Bolivia has resigned. América once again lives
days of immediate history. Jean Friedsky, reporting from the streets of
La Paz, writes in the Narcosphere:

"After a combative day on the streets of La Paz and more than two
weeks of turmoil in Bolivia, President Carlos Mesa has resigned from
the Presidency. He appeared tonight at approximately 9:45pm, live from
the Presidential Palace, to let his country and the world know that he
no can longer lead a nation in such a divided and tumultous state. He
affirmed that he had been a strong leader who had tried everything he
could to bring about agreement on the controversial issues, but that at
this point, his time had come to an end; he can do no more. He pleaded
that Bolivians' find a solution for the current conflict through
dialogue, rather than protests. His resignation, however, is dependent
on the Congress accepting his decree. As such, he assured the nation
that his resignation does not create a power vacuum because he will
continue to govern until there is Congressional approval. He reminded
us all that he 'was born in Bolivia, lives in Bolivia, and will
continue to be in Bolivia' for the duration of this crisis.

"Far from marking an end to this battle, Mesa's resignation will only
initiate a new chapter. Should Mesa's resignation be accepted, the
right-wing President of the Senate Hormando Vaca Diez will assume
power. This would further inflame the already enraged protesters that
have been marching and shutting down the nation for the past two weeks.
However Santa Cruz and the Bolivian elite will do what they can to
maintain the power that could be coming their way. And, clearly, Mesa's
resignation does nothing to change the status of Bolivia's gas
reserves, nor does it address the proposals of a Constitutional
Assembly or a referendum on Autonomy. All it does is open up more
questions."

Read the full report:

http://narcosphere.narconews.com/story/2005/6/6/223313/0055

New is streaming into the Narcosphere quickly. Keep watching this page
for updates:

http://narcosphere.narconews.com

From somewhere in a country called América,

Dan Feder
Managing Editor
The Narco News Bulletin
http://www.narconews.com
webmaster [at] narconews.com

Narco News is supported by:

The Fund for Authentic Journalism
P.O. Box 241
Natick, MA 01760
http://www.authenticjournalism.org

The Fund receives online donations at this web page:

http://www.authenticjournalism.org

Apply for your co-publisher's account, here:

http://www.narconews.com/copublisher/application.php

Subscribe for free alerts of new reports:

http://groups.yahoo.com/group/narconews
Add Your Comments

Comments (Hide Comments)
by Narco News
June 6, 2005
Please Distribute Widely

Dear Colleague,

I write to you a few blocks from the Palace of Government. While around
half a million people have mobilized in the streets of La Paz today,
the rumors in the streets and information coming to us from government
sources agree: President Mesa could resign at any time. If this
happens, the President of the National Congress, Senator Hormando Vaca
Diez, would have to assume the presidency, and will have already
reached an agreement with the Armed Forces to immediately decree a
state of siege.

http://narcosphere.narconews.com/story/2005/6/6/17431/08183

A little more history was written today, Monday, June 6, in the streets
of the seat of government, the city of La Paz: The most combative
sectors of the social movements (the urban and rural Aymara, the miners
and El Alto university students, among others) have expanded their
siege of the center of State power: there have been clashes with the
police for ours in attempts to take the Plaza Murillo.

This morning there were more people in the streets than before,
possibly more than ever before in the recent history of social
mobilizations in Bolivia. Perhaps half a million people, perhaps more,
according to the calculations of a leader from District 8 of El Alto.

The public school teachers arrived earlier at the Plaza de los Héroes.
Today is Teachers' Day in Bolivia, and there were more than 30,000
educators in the streets. It was just after 10:00 in the morning and
they went out alone to shut down central La Paz. A half hour later the
two immense marches from El Alto arrived, one made up of the city's
southern districts and another from the north.

The minerworkers' federation arrived, as did the factory workers, the
students, followed by the peasant farmers from the communities south of
La Paz, and the neighborhoods from La Paz's eastern slopes, which form
the border with El Alto. They were all there, together with Aymara
peasant farmers from several provinces, and together held another great
council like the one last week...

The council's decisions, approved by hundreds of thousands of raised
hands, came out around noon:

1. Total hydrocarbon nationalization, and the occupation of gas and oil
wells.
2. Out with Mesa and the National Congress.

While all this occurred, for the last two days in the city of Santa
Cruz, the Bolivian political class and the Santa Cruz right wing have
been meeting to try to reach a solution and end this crisis (President
Mesa himself was there on Saturday)... and they are not getting
anywhere.

Because of this, according to a source within the Catholic Church who
asked to remain anonymous, Carlos Mesa has a resignation letter ready
and could present it, at latest, tomorrow night.

But the people in La Paz were one step ahead. Around 1:30 pm a
contingent of peasant farmers from various provinces and interrupted
the popular assembly: they wanted to take Plaza Murillo once and for
all and throw Mesa and the members of Congress out of there.

And so the clashes began... and the gas and rubber bullets began to
fall on the people. For nearly two hours the people have been fighting
the police and at the moment the smell of teargas and the tires burning
to lesson its effects is everywhere. The people are regrouping and
still encircle the plaza on all sides.

At the time the people decided to head into combat, it was known that
Carlos Mesa would give a speech around 3:30 pm (he had to suspend the
event during the confrontations). Now, it is nearly a fact, and a
resignation message (perhaps prerecorded) is expected as the entire
country hangs on the edge of its seat...

Senator Vaca Diez, president of the National Congress and one of the
main representatives of the coup-plotting right wing, would take power
in Bolivia. He is ready. According to a source in the Armed Forces, the
Bolivian military will not put down the protesters until Mesa
resigns... but it seems that military leaders have reached an agreement
with Vaca Diez to declare a state of siege today...

A few minutes ago, in an interview with Radio Erbol of La Paz, Evo
Morales asked for President Carlos Mesa's resignation, and that
Hormando Vaca Diez as well as Chamber of Deputies (Bolivia's lower
house of Congress) president Mario Cossío renounce their constitutional
right to presidential succession.

This would leave power in the hands of the president of the Supreme
Court, who, according to the constitution, would have to call elections
within three months. This would be, according to Morales, the best
solution.

Such is the situation in the first few hours of the afternoon...
nothing is certain, nothing confirmed, but we are sure of one thing:
the people are determined, and it doesn't seem that Mesa's eventual
resignation or a call to a Constituent Assembly (especially if Vaca
Diez takes power) will hold them back... stay here, kind readers,
because history is once again being written in the Bolivian streets.

http://narcosphere.narconews.com/

From somewhere in a country called América,

Luis A. Gómez
Acting Publisher
The Narco News Bulletin
http://www.narconews.com
Email: luisgomez [at] narconews.com

Narco News is supported by:

The Fund for Authentic Journalism
P.O. Box 241
Natick, MA 01760
http://www.authenticjournalism.org

The Fund receives online donations at this web page:

http://www.authenticjournalism.org

Apply for your co-publisher's account, here:

http://www.narconews.com/copublisher/application.php

Subscribe for free alerts of new reports:

http://groups.yahoo.com/group/narconews
by JA is a neo-nazi in disguise
JA is a neo-nazi in disguise
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