LA PAZ, Bolivia (AP) 鈥 Supporters of Bolivia鈥檚 influential clashed with police on Monday in the capital city as they called on the president to resign, joining a nationwide movement fueled by the in a generation.
Thousands of Morales’ followers converged on the plaza outside the government headquarters as Bolivia remains paralyzed by road blockades that have strangled cities and triggered food and fuel shortages in the last two weeks.
The unrest presents the biggest challenge yet for , a business friendly centrist who came to power six months ago as a electoral wins swept the region.
Security forces pushed back protesters who tried to break police ranks with canisters of tear gas before they could reach Congress or the presidential palace. Dynamite blasts rumbled, forcing staffers and lawmakers to evacuate. 鈥淗omeland or death, we will win!鈥 demonstrators chanted, ripping shop doors off their hinges and setting fire to looted sofas used as barricades.
The public prosecutor announced 90 arrests.
鈥淭hey can march if it鈥檚 peaceful, but we will take action if they commit crimes,鈥 said Deputy Interior Minister Hern谩n Paredes.
A new president’s balancing act
Paz’s shock victory last year highlighted Bolivians’ disillusionment with two decades of political domination by Morales鈥 Movement Toward Socialism, or MAS, party, as the country reeled from its worst economic crisis in 40 years. But his victory over more right-wing candidates also revealed the nation’s unwillingness to support drastic austerity measures.
As Bolivia’s first elected conservative leader since 2006, Paz has sought to balance belt-tightening with the need to placate Morales’ powerful allies who could disrupt his presidency.
To rein in a massive budget deficit, he eliminated fuel subsidies that represented a pillar of the MAS economic model. But he maintained social welfare programs and offered new benefits to informal workers to blunt the blow of inflation.
That wasn’t enough for many Bolivians. The protest movement began with the national labor union demanding wage hikes. Then farmers furious about poor quality fuel joined. Then miners strapped for dynamite piled on pressure. Now loyalists of Morales want Paz gone.
鈥淪mall things have been accumulating 鈥 the wage issue, the economic crisis, dirty gasoline that people say is ruining their cars, diesel shortages,” said Veronica Rocha, a Bolivia political analyst. 鈥淭here鈥檚 a huge portion of the population that feels orphaned politically. They don鈥檛 trust anyone anymore, and because of that, anything can happen.鈥
Challenges mount with road blocks
Paz accuses Morales of orchestrating the unrest to undermine his administration. Road blockades have long been a main weapon of social movements tied to Morales that claim to represent Bolivia鈥檚 rural Indigenous majority.
Over the past 16 days, the protest tactic has stranded around 5,000 trucks on highways, leaving supermarket shelves empty and hospitals without some medical supplies. Critics say it’s a perverse way to protest economic pain 鈥 business chambers report the blockades cause over $50 million in losses a day.
Paz has negotiated with some protest groups, reaching deals in recent days with striking miners and teachers who agreed to end their demonstrations. He deployed thousands of police and military officers across La Paz to try to break the blockades over the weekend.
But the crisis continues, worrying the wider region. Eight allied Latin American governments, from Chile to Costa Rica, released a joint statement rejecting 鈥渁ny action aimed at destabilizing the democratic order.鈥 Neighboring said it would start a weeklong humanitarian airlift to alleviate shortages in the country.
The United States, now after years in which Morales defined the country in opposition to Washington, said it supported Paz鈥檚 efforts 鈥渢o restore order for the peace, security and stability of the Bolivian people.鈥 The State Department issued an alert this week urging U.S. citizens traveling to Bolivia to be vigilant.
Morales marshaled the latest march from his hideout in Bolivia’s remote tropics. He has been holed up in the highlands for the past year and a half, evading an arrest warrant on . He says the allegations are politically motivated.
Right-wing politicians have seized on the protests to demand authorities arrest Morales, who was held in contempt of court last week after he failed to appear for a trial.
But Morales’ enduring influence 鈥渋s only one piece of the puzzle,鈥 Rocha said. “If the government wants to survive politically, it will have to make drastic changes.鈥
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DeBre reported from Ushuaia, Argentina.
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