Pubdate: Tue,  2 Jul 2002
Source: Miami Herald (FL)
Copyright: 2002 The Miami Herald
Contact:  http://www.miami.com/mld/miamiherald/
Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/262
Author: Kevin G. Hall

BOLIVIAN'S RUN FOR OFFICE PUTS DRUG FIGHT AT RISK

RIO DE JANEIRO, Brazil - The unexpectedly strong showing of radical Indian 
agitator Evo Morales in Bolivian elections promises to deal a serious blow 
to the Andean nation's U.S.-backed efforts to halt cocaine production.

Morales, an Aymara Indian, campaigned on an anti-United States platform and 
the promise to reverse Bolivia's efforts to eradicate coca, the plant from 
which cocaine is made.

Preliminary returns from Sunday's presidential election, announced Monday, 
showed Morales battling for third place in the presidential race, with 
about 17 percent of the vote. Because the presidential voting determines 
the award of senate seats under Bolivian law, that strong finish will give 
his party -- called Movement to Socialism -- as many as six seats in 
Bolivia's 27-member senate. That in turn will put him in a strong position 
to thwart new legislation to punish those who grow the coca bush.

Support Surges

Support for Morales surged following comments from the U.S. ambassador 
effectively warning voters away from Morales.

Morales trailed leaders Gonzalo Sanchez de Lozada and Manfred Reyes Villa 
by less than five percentage points and declared his strong showing "a 
moral victory."

Interviewed in the capital, La Paz, days before the election, Bolivian 
anti-drug czar Oswaldo Antezana said Morales "could undo everything we have 
done." Bolivia has eradicated more than 90,000 acres of coca cultivation 
since 1998 and taken more than 230 tons of cocaine out of the global market 
in illicit drugs.

Even if traditional parties joined to outvote Morales on future drug 
legislation, they would do so at their own peril. Morales' strong showing 
among Indian and mixed-race Bolivians, who are the majority in the nation 
of 8.3 million, ensures that politicians will think twice before espousing 
new open-market reforms or penalizing the transportation and possession of 
coca leaves as the United States advocates.

Populist Appeal

Morales, 42, showed how unpopular the coca eradication policies are among 
the poor, who are a majority of the electorate and who have not felt any 
benefit from U.S.-backed economic reforms. Morales deftly reminded citizens 
in South America's poorest economy that the United States failed to reward 
anti-coca efforts with open markets for textiles and farm products.

Just a week before Sunday's vote, Morales was stuck in the 10 percent range 
in opinion polls. But U.S. Ambassador V. Manuel Rocha gave him a huge boost 
with ill-timed comments last Wednesday.

"As a representative of the United States, I want to remind the Bolivian 
electorate that if you elect those who want Bolivia to become a major 
cocaine exporter again, this will endanger the future of U.S. assistance to 
Bolivia," Rocha said in a widely condemned speech.

Bolivians of all political stripes decried as unacceptable U.S. threats in 
the middle of a Bolivian election campaign. The comments apparently pushed 
undecided voters into the camp of Morales, who dubbed Rocha his "campaign 
chief." The U.S. Embassy in Bolivia had no comment Monday.

Bolivia once led the world in coca cultivation and cocaine trafficking. In 
1998, it launched Plan Dignity, which has resulted in the eradication of at 
least 85 percent of the coca, which is used by the nation's Indians for 
medicinal purposes. Most of the eradicated coca was grown in the Chapare, a 
New Jersey-sized tropical region that is the hot bed of support for Morales 
and was home to much of Bolivia's drug trafficking.

Nonnative Staple

Coca is not native to the Chapare, and the coca bush grown there is too 
bitter for teas or chewing. Most is geared specifically to the illegal drug 
trade.

The United States and Europe have spent millions of dollars on helping 
Chapare farmers grow alternative crops, but results have been mixed.

Morales will also be influential in a planned special session of Congress 
designed to amend the Bolivian Constitution. Indigenous Bolivians want an 
article amended explicitly granting them greater participation in 
government and clearer land rights.

Partly at stake in the upcoming battle is whether the state or Indians 
should be the owners of the gold, silver and natural gas deposits beneath 
Bolivian soil.
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