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The election of indigenous leader Evo Morales as president of Bolivia
is being hailed by native leaders from throughout the region as a "sign
of hope" for all impoverished and discriminated indigenous peoples in Latin
America.
Guatemalan Nobel Peace Prize laureate Rigoberto Menchú said that Morales
has brought "a refreshing wind" for all aboriginal peoples.
For his part, the president of the powerful Confederation of Indigenous Nationalities
of Ecuador (CONAIE), Luis Macas, said that Morales' victory is a historical
landmark unlike anything seen "since the time of Spanish colonialism."
Morales, who captured 51 percent of the votes in Sunday's elections according
to preliminary results, will take office on Jan. 22 as the first indigenous
president in the history of Bolivia, where 60 percent of the population of 8.6
million identify themselves with one of the country's indigenous groups, according
to the 2002 census.
The 46-year-old president-elect, a member of the Aymara community, Bolivia's
largest ethnic group, emerged as a leader of the country's coca farmers in the
central region of Chapare, and has consistently spoken out for the struggles
and demands of the country's poverty-stricken and marginalised indigenous majority.
Menchú, a Mayan Indian activist who was awarded the Nobel Peace Prize
in 1992, said that Morales' triumph was "an important precedent in the
social struggles of the entire region," but warned that "we know he
is going to need all of the support of his brothers and sisters."
Rafael González, chair of the Committee for Campesino Unity (CUC) in
Guatemala, told IPS he hopes "Morales' victory will have repercussions
throughout the Americas," and that in the future, other indigenous peoples
"will have a president who truly represents them, like the one in Bolivia."
There are between 33 and 40 million indigenous people in Latin America, divided
into some 400 different ethnic groups, although almost all share something in
common: poverty and discrimination.
Indigenous organisations and leaders, like Morales, Menchú, Macas and
González, among others, have been struggling to draw attention to this
reality and making ever louder demands for political and social change in their
countries since the early 1990s.
Over the last 15 years, powerful, organised indigenous movements in Latin America
have succeeded in overthrowing governments in Bolivia and Ecuador and forced
the issue of aboriginal people's rights onto the political agenda, as in the
case of Mexico and the primarily indigenous Zapatista National Liberation Army
(EZLN).
Throughout the same period, a growing number of indigenous people have been
elected to public office, as mayors, members of Congress and government ministers.
In Bolivia itself, Aymara Indian Víctor Hugo Cárdenas served as
vice president from 1993 to 1997.
Now an indigenous politician has reached the highest seat of power for the
first time in Bolivia.
Morales "will always be able to count on his indigenous brothers and sisters.
If we can counsel or support him in any way, we will do so," said Menchú.
The Nobel Prize winner cautioned that the new president will be confronting
"a very complicated and complex task, because he will be leading a country
where racism and discrimination are very deep-rooted," in addition to "serious
economic problems, poverty and social and political divisions."
A World Bank report released this year, titled "Indigenous Peoples, Poverty
and Human Development in Latin America: 1994-2004", revealed that 74 percent
of indigenous people in Bolivia live in poverty.
"Almost two-thirds of the indigenous population is among the poorest 50
percent of the population," the researchers reported, noting that "if
gains were perfectly distributed, Bolivia's indigenous population would require
about twice as much income per person as the non-indigenous population to escape
poverty."
The indigenous population has 3.7 fewer years of schooling (a total of 5.9
years) than the non-indigenous population (9.6 years) in Bolivia, while the
incidence of child labour is nearly four times higher among indigenous than
non-indigenous children, the study adds.
The World Bank report points out that the political influence of indigenous
peoples in Latin America - who account for 10 percent of the population of the
region - has "grown remarkably" in the last 15 years, as measured
by indigenous political parties and elected representatives, constitutional
provisions for indigenous people, and indigenous-tailored health and education
policies.
Nevertheless, income levels among this group, as well as human development
indicators such as education and health conditions, "have consistently
lagged behind those of the rest of the population."
In the five Latin American countries with the largest indigenous populations
- Bolivia, Ecuador, Guatemala, Mexico and Peru - simply being born indigenous
increases the probability of being poor by between 13 and 30 percent.
Luis Macas believes that the election of an indigenous president will not only
benefit Bolivia, but the rest of Latin America as well.
His fellow CONAIE representative Miguel Guatemal, the group's organisational
director, said it was especially encouraging that Morales had won the presidential
elections within a "neoliberal and colonial" system.
"For all of the indigenous peoples of the Americas, Morales' victory is
an important precedent that shows there is hope for the future," Guatemal
commented to IPS.