Bolivia: Social Organisations of The Tropics Decide To Expel USAID From The Chapare
Bolivia Rising
Shinahota (Cochabamba), June 24 (ABI) - The social organisations of the
tropics of Cochabamba, represented by the six federations of coca producers
and peasants, together with the municipalities of this region, decided to
expel USAID from this part of the country.
In order to achieve this objective, they decided that the municipalities,
social organisations and non government organisations had until June 26 to
put an end to any agreement they have with this American entity, accused of
conspiring against the government of president Evo Morales.
Starting from Wednesday June 25, each one of the federations will begin to
remove all USAID notices from the different projects done in collaboration
with the municipalities and the social organisations themselves. "Not a
single vestige of this foreign organisatons should remain in all the
tropics" assured the deputy, Asterio Romero, in declarations made to Radio
Kawsachun Coca.
"The Chapare has been dignified at the national and international level
because of its struggle in defence of the homeland and the fact that it has
been consequent with its fight. We have therefore decided to kick out USAID
from the Chapare, by June 26" affirmed the parliamentarian.
He expressed the fact that the coca cultivators and peasants of the region
had decided that, starting from that day, there should not be a single piece
of evidence left of this project financed by the United Status.
"No agreement can remain in place, or one single office, or a billboard, or
absolutely anything that mentions its presence in this region" expressed
Romero.
Asked about the motives behind this decision, he affirmed that there exist
serious indications that USAID is encouraging and promoting groups such as
the Cruceñista Youth Union that sowed violence and fear in the departments
where consultations on autonomy statutes were held.
"It can not be that, on one hand, they say they are cooperating and, on the
other, they are causing so much damage, fanning confrontations between
Bolivians" he pointed out.
In this context, Romero denounced that USAID now finds itself involved in
the planning of a coup against the government of president Evo Morales.
"They are even looking to end his life, that is why, with that same dignity
with which we have begun to the Democratic and Cultural Revolution, we have
taken this decision" indicated Romero.
- The International Community and Haiti: Testing the Water or Sinking the Ship?
- UN Peacekeeping Paramilitarism
- Bolivia Debates MINUSTAH Role
- Huge Crowds Meet Hugo Chávez in Port-au-Prince
- Chávez and Venezuela: Duty, not Charity, to Haiti
- Canada's Development Aid as Counterinsurgency Tool
- Cuban Refugees Get Hero's Welcome, Haitian Refugees Turned Away (Editorial)
- Anti-Arms Trade Group Releases Study on Canada's Role in 2004 Coup d'état
- The Tenets of Humanitarian Intervention: Haiti's Malleable Reality
- Haiti: Pain at the Pump Spurs Strike Actions
- Haiti-Dominican Republic: Neighbours, But Not Friends
- Venezuela Endorses ALBA Accord with Haiti
- Canada's Aid to Haiti in Context
- Canadian Prime Minister Steven Harper Visits Haiti
- Justice Denied: Haitian Political Prisoners and Canadian Development Dollars
- Haitians Request Support from Venezuela to Eradicate Illiteracy
- If Stones Could Float: The British Press and the Turks and Caicos Boat Disaster
- France's Rama Yade in Haiti: New Face, Same Old Agenda
- AFRICOM: US Military Control of Africa’s Resources
- Haiti: Duvalier Could Face Justice
- Burma and Haiti: Comparing the Canadian Government and Media Response
- Striking While The Irony Is Hot: Acknowledging Haiti’s Aid During the American War of Independence
- Interview with CARICOM Asstistant Secretary-General Colin Granderson
- Chavez Proposes OPEC Sell Oil Cheaper to Poor Countries
- CIA Operation "Pliers" Uncovered in Venezuela
- Human Rights Crusader Michael Ratner: We'll Keep Going After Bush and Cheney When They Leave Office
- Did He Jump or Was He Pushed? Aristide and the 2004 Coup in Haiti
- Delayed Debt Cancellation Will Only Hurt Haiti, New CEPR Paper Finds
- Editorial: National Memory and the Anniversary of the Battle of Vertières
- To Help Haiti Recover, Cancel Its Debt
- Haiti's Debt
- US Policy On Haiti Needs Adjusting, Congresswoman Says
- Philip Agee (1935-2008): Let Us Now Praise an (In)famous Man
- Former Haitian Minister of Foreign Affairs, Harold Bruno, to Pay 76 Million Gourdes for Funds Misappropriation Under the Latortue Regime
- France Falls Out Of Love
- Venezuelan PSUV Drafts Program and Principles
- Haiti and "Overwhelming Strength" in Florida
- ALBA: Creating a Regional Alternative to Neo-liberalism?
- The Militarization of the World's Urban Peripheries
- Préval Asks Bush to Stop Deportations
- Editorial: "Diversity" In The French Government
- From Haiti to Tibet, China's Role in Suppressing Democracy
- Venezuela Sends 364 Tons of Food to Haiti
- US Navy Resurrects 4th Fleet to Police Latin America
- Regional Conflicts and Food Prices in OAS Assembly Agenda
- Models of Coming U.S. Interventions: Iraq or Haiti?
- Cuba, Venezuela to Install Undersea Cable
- Lula Haiti Visit Prompts Protests in Brazil, Mexico and San Francisco
- Land Reforms Averted Food Crisis in Venezuela: Chavez
- Bush Administration Accused of Withholding "Lifesaving" Aid to Haiti
- Editorial: Paul Martin's History of Haiti and Future Plans for Africa
- Bolivia: Social Organisations of The Tropics Decide To Expel USAID From The Chapare
- Rwanda Accuses Top French Officials in 1994 Genocide
- Danny Glover, Haiti, and the Politics of Revolutionary Cinema in Venezuela
- PetroCaribe Rescue





















