Tag Archive | "bolivia"

Venezuela: Maduro Sworn In As Caretaker President, Elections Called


Nicolás Maduro was sworn in as caretaker president on Friday (photo courtesy of Venezuelan government)

Nicolás Maduro was sworn in as caretaker president on Friday (photo courtesy of Venezuelan government)

Nicolás Maduro was sworn in as caretaker president of Venezuela on Friday, following the death of Hugo Chávez. He said in his first words as Venezuelan leader, “I will do all I can to honour Chávez.” His swearing in has been widely criticised by opposition parties.

“I wear this band, as legitimate president, to protect the people and to make sure the revolution continues.” Maduro said, speaking in front of the Venezuelan people who held banners reading “With Chávez and Maduro this country is safe.” Maduro will be caretaker president until a new president is elected next month.

The Venezuelan Electoral Council announced today that the elections will be held on 14th April, and the campaign will take place between 2nd and 11th April. The opposition Mesa de Unidad Democrática (MUD) confirmed that they have offered Henrique Capriles the opportunity to represent them in the election. Capriles was the candidate in the last election in October, when he lost against Chávez.

Maduro also confirmed his belief that Chávez was murdered, and announced that a scientific commission is to be set up to investigate an alleged attack targeting the late president.

Evo Morales, the President of Bolivia, has stated that he is “almost certain” that the death of Venezuelan leader Hugo Chávez was a result of poisoning by the United States.

“Our brothers like Nicolás Maduro and other authorities in Venezuela will carry out a profound investigation, but I am almost certain that this is a poisoning case against Chávez,” said Morales in La Paz, Bolivia.

He went on to say that “the Empire (United States) has all the instruments to plan actions to other throw governments, leaders, social movements that are against capitalism” and suggested that both former Palestine leader Yaser Arafat and Venezuelan political leader Simón Bolivar were also poisoned.

Morales, who returned to La Paz after attending Chávez’s state funeral in Caracas, also accused the “Empire” of fostering internal or bilateral conflicts when coup d’état attempts fail in order to justify UN military interventions, serving countries that seek to loot natural resources.

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Bolivia: Twenty Towns Accused of Contraband


Bolivian customs (Photo: George Hatcher on Flickr)

Bolivian customs (Photo: George Hatcher on Flickr)

Bolivian National Customs announced on Monday that roughly 20 towns sustain themselves solely through illicit trade activities. The majority of the towns are small in size and near the western border of Bolivia.

While the country’s western border is shared with Chile, the majority of the trade appears to be occurring with Paraguay, authorities said. Some of the products smuggled through to neighbouring countries include cigarettes and alcohol.

“There is complicity (amongst authorities) with the contraband and it is happening through bribery,” head of Bolivian Customs Marlene Ardaya said. “Someone wants to finance a party, sometimes it’s that simple, and this leads to them (the smugglers) hiding themselves in villages such as in Eucaliptus or Sabaya.”

Officials have not been able to address the issue in some areas, due to danger of civilian harm.

“We cannot intervene directly in some towns that we know have contraband because the smugglers are using the women and children as shields,” Ardaya said.

Ardaya stressed that cooperation on the part authorities in the affected areas is crucial to ridding the country of its smuggling issue.

“This can only be done if a complaint (from these authorities) exists and with participation of the prosecution,” she said.

For example, in Sabaya, Ardaya said, it is known that the customs system is functioning poorly, yet attempts to establish a checkpoint have been opposed.

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Chile: Detained Bolivian Soldiers to be Tried Friday


Evo Morales, President of Bolivia. (Photo: Alain Bachellier, in Flickr)

Evo Morales, President of Bolivia. (Photo: Alain Bachellier, in Flickr)

Chilean justice officials have determined that three Bolivian soldiers will face a hearing in Chile on Friday. The soldiers were detained for entering Chile without permission and with possession of weaponry.

After being detained for a month, the soldiers recently refused a plea bargain and were denied the ability to return to Bolivia before the trial.

“The Bolivian soldiers, through their legal advisor, made use of their legitimate rights, just like any Chilean citizen, and didn’t accept the plea bargain offered by the district attorney,” Chilean Assistant National Prosecutor Alberto Ayala said.

He said their sentences could be reduced over time if they are convicted, but Bolivian President Evo Morales has taken issue with the soldiers’ detention.

“They are not guilty,” Morales said. “The detention is unjust.”

A judicial source noted that there had been plans to avoid a trial and have the three soldiers leave the country on Friday, but the trial will be go ahead and there will be a discussion to determine the soldiers’ fate.

Tension has been common between the two countries of late, after Morales accused Chilean President Sebastián Piñera of using the three soldiers as “political hostages.”

Piñera disputed that argument last Friday.

“These three people are being detained not because they are Bolivians, not because they are soldiers, but because they crossed the border into Chilean territory,” Piñera said.

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Bolivia: Interoceanic Highway to Open in April


Billinghurst bridge still under construction as of March 2011 in Madre de Dios (Photo: Erik Jennische)

Billinghurst bridge still under construction as of March 2011 in Madre de Dios (Photo: Erik Jennische)

President Evo Morales announced today that the Interoceanic highway linking the Atlantic and Pacific oceans via Peru, Bolivia, and Brazil, will open on 5th April. The inauguration of the trade route will take place in the Bolivian department of Santa Cruz by Morales, President Dilma Rousseff of Brazil, and Peruvian President Ollanta Humala.

The highway will link the Atlantic and Pacific Oceans in order to boost regional trade, with Morales stating at the press conference that this link would reaffirm the integration between the three countries.

The agreement for the Interoceanic highway was signed in 2007 by leaders of Bolivia, Brazil and Chile with a planned length of almost 2,700km. The signing of the agreement marked the beginning of an active phase of the realisation of the project, which has so far received investments put at US$1.6bn by the Initiative for the Integration of the Infrastructure of the Region of South America (IIRSA).

Bolivia recently announced the redirection of both the road to southern Peru’s Matarani or Ilo, diverting the routes from the originally planned northern Chile.

However, the construction of the trade route has not come without criticism, with many social and environmental concerns being raised. The highway cuts through the Isconahua Reserve, which is home to some of Peru’s estimated 15 uncontacted tribes, and it has been argued that its construction has furthered the destruction of the Brazilian Amazon rainforest.

The exclusion of Chilean President Sebastián Piñera from the announcement and the inauguration coincides with the climate of tension between Chile and Bolivia due to the detention of three Bolivian soldiers, accused of illegally crossing the border into Chile.

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Bolivia: The Year of Quinoa


Quinoa - IMG_3429.JPG

Quinoa by Flickred!, on Flickr

Bolivia’s president Evo Morales and Peru’s first lady Nadine Heredia, will launch the 2013 International Year of Quinoa today; following their UN appointment as special ambassadors last year.

The International Year of Quinoa (IYQ) was proposed by the Bolivian government back in December 2011, and received the support of Argentina, Azerbaijan, Ecuador, Georgia, Honduras, Nicaragua, Paraguay, Peru, Uruguay, and the UN’s Food and Agriculture Organization (FAO).

The launch of the IYQ will be overseen by UN Secretary-General Ban Ki-Moon, the president of the 67th Regular Session of the General Assembly, Vuk Jeremic, and managing director of the FAO José Graziano da Silva. Peru’s minister for Foreign Affairs, Rafael Roncangliolo Orbegosa, and Ecuador’s minister for Agriculture and Livestock, Javier Ponce Cevallos, will also be present.

Colloquially referred to as the “golden grain of the Andes”, it is highly prized in global markets thanks to its exceptional nutritional qualities, its adaptability to different agro-ecological floors, and its potential contribution in the fight against hunger and malnutrition.

Historically, the Incas used the pseudo-cereal in their ancient rites, but it was later banned by colonisers on the pretext that it was being used in ‘pagan’ rituals. Over the last few years, international prices have risen by 500%, due largely to Bolivia’s stalwart promotion of the grain.

TeleSUR’s Bolivia correspondent, Freddy Morales, affirmed that, “Bolivia will concentrate all its efforts so that all of humanity can consider this grain a leading alternative foodstuff”. Its rediscovery in recent years has sparked Bolivian hopes that the pseudo-cereal will become a globally consumed foodstuff.

Bolivia is currently the leading world producer of quinoa. Such is the grains nutritional value, NASA has included it in the diet of its astronauts. According to studies, quinoa is the only plant foodstuff to contain “all the essential amino acids”, as well as boasting a higher protein value than any other grain including “wheat, rice, maize and oats”.

Primary consumers of Peruvian and Bolivian quinoa include the US, Canada, Australia, Germany, and other European nations.

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Bolivia: President Evo Morales Nationalises Airports


AeroSur Airlines in Bolivia (Photo: AeroSur.com)

AeroSur Airlines in Bolivia (Photo: AeroSur.com)

Earlier today, Bolivian president Evo Morales announced plans to nationalise the country’s three largest airports. The airport operator Bolivian Airports Service Company (SABSA), a subsidiary of the Spanish firm Abertis y Aena, is accused of not carrying out agreed investments towards updating its facilities.

The decision to nationalise SABSA was taken after executives refused to increase their initial investment of US$36m, required to maintain and develop the country’s principal airports. The military is set to take control of airport terminals in El Alto (La Paz), Viru-Viru (Santa Cruz), and Wilsterman (Cochabamba). In Bolivia, it is common practice for troops to be dispatched to recently nationalised companies.

SABSA is the third Spanish company to be nationalised in less than a year in what began with the expropriation of Red Eléctrica in May 2012, followed by two electricity distribution companies owned by Spanish utility Iberdrola in December of the same year.

The nationalisation of SABSA reflects attempts by the Bolivian government to reclaim control of the country’s strategic resources, including natural gas, minerals, and public services. It is a move which aims to promote and indeed facilitate state-led development of the country without direct foreign interference. Morales issued the statement from the main city of Cochabamba, accompanied by vice-president Álvaro García Linera and the minister for public works, Vladimir Sánchez.

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Chile: Supreme Court Detains Bolivian Soldiers


Supreme Court building in Santiago. (Photo by Alstradiaan Alstradiaan Blog on Wikimedia Commons)

The Bolivian government is appealing for the release of three of its soldiers in Chile after the Supreme Court have rejected appeals to suspend their detention.

The Bolivian soldiers Alex Choque, 20, Augusto Cardenas, 19, and Jose Luis Fernandez, 18, were arrested on 25th January in Colchane, Tarapaca for chasing a gang of car smugglers.

According to the Chilean authorities, the soldiers are being detained for unauthorised entry into Chile and illegal possession of war weapons. However, Bolivian President Evo Morales has said that the detention is “illegal” and “unacceptable”.

The Bolivian media also claims that a local army group were chasing two car smugglers, and while one crashed, the other four went on to cross the border into Chile, where they were then chased by the three Bolivian soldiers in question.

One of Chile’s national prosecutors, Francisco Ljubetic told Chilean Radio station ADN Hoy, that the soldiers, who are currently being held in a prison in Alto Hospicio, could serve up to five years.

Bolivian Deputy Foreign Minister Juan Carlos Alurralde announced yesterday that the country is following advised steps to release the soldiers and at first will proceed with taking peaceful measures.

“And if this is not resolved, in the next few days a lawsuit will definitely be designed and presented before an international court,” Alurralde added.

Chile’s Supreme Court voted four to one to detain the Bolivian soldiers.

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Chile: Controversy Over Sailors’ Xenophobic Chants


A video of Chilean sailors chanting nationalistic phrases is creating controversy on the Internet. The video, posted on YouTube on Monday, shows the sailors shouting, “I will kill Argentines, I will shoot Bolivians, I will behead Peruvians.”

The songs were deemed “unacceptable” by Argentine minister of defence Arturo Puricelli. Spokeswoman of Chilean president Sebastián Piñera, Celcilia Pérez, called them “shameful.”

Bolivian president Evo Morales, in turn, demanded an “international conviction” of Chile after the incident and Bolivian Minister of Defence expressed an “energetic protest and rejection” of the video for its “xenophobic language intended to direct animosity toward Bolivian citizens.”

Chilean interim minister of defence Alfonso Vargas gave the Navy 24 hours to punish those responsible for the xenophobic chants. Thursday, the Chilean Navy identified the 27 sailors from the video and said that sanctions will announced within the next 20 days.

“I want to say categorically that situations like this cannot occur,” he told La Tercera newspaper. “We have been victims of similar situations from other countries toward Chile and we haven’t enjoyed it.”

Not all Chileans have been quite as remorseful, however. Deputy of the Unión Democrática Independiente (UDI) Gonzalo Arenas made some satirical remarks on Twitter regarding the controversy over the video.

“To avoid those ‘violent’ sailor songs, I suggest to the Navy commander that he register them in embroidery and cross-stitch classes,” he tweeted.

Another tweet read, “I’ll tell you something even more perverse. In the Navy, not only do they teach those songs, they also teach you how to shoot …. Imagine such barbarity!!”

The controversy comes at a time when Chilean relations with Bolivia and Peru are already somewhat strained. Last year, Chilean leaders claimed to feel “harassed” by the two countries, and Bolivia has recently accused Chile of preparing for a war. The three countries have also been involved in territorial disputes of late.

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The Sacred Leaf: How Bolivia Is Helping Change the Anti-Drug Paradigm


Bolivia

Coca leaves in a Bolivian market in Sucre (Photo: Julyinireland, on Flickr)

It is a simple-looking leaf: dark green with a light underside, small—barely larger than a digit of Bolivian president Evo Morales’ finger. Yet for what looks like a cousin of the common bay leaf, coca inspires strong sentiments. Coca has stitched Andean society and spirituality together for so many years that the reverence it commands is hard to compare. And in an international discourse ruled by rigid adherence to narcotic prohibition, the fight to carve space for coca ignites fierce resistance.

But earlier this month, Bolivia scored a breakthrough. The UN admitted Bolivia back into the 1961 Single Convention on Narcotic Drugs, exempting it from the clause that criminalises coca leaf. The decision not only has major implications for coca chewers, but for Bolivia’s cultural identity and for the future of Latin American drug control policy.

The ‘Wise’ Leaf

Coca is native to the Andean region, where people have cultivated the shrub for at least five millennia—at least as far back as the Incan Empire. Nowadays, coca leaf chewing, or acullico in the Aymara indigenous language, is still a major element of Bolivian diet. Roughly 90% of Bolivians in the high plains region are regular coca chewers, according to La Paz Coca Museum founder Jorge Hurtado. Dried leaves are arranged into a packet that is placed into the mouth, sometimes supplemented by lye, sugar baking soda, or the stevia plant. The juices released by saliva are said to alleviate altitude sickness, regulate digestion, stave off the cold, and suppress appetite. But more than anything, coca chewers use it as a mild stimulant, perhaps analogous to yerba mate or coffee. Federative Bolivian Association president Alfredo Oyola describes its “very strong energy” that “keeps you sharp and awake.” He mentions that long-haul truckers use it maintain focus during hours on the road. “No one drives without being able to chew.”

'El Tío' - 'The Uncle'... give him some tobacco, alcohol, coca leaves and he will be happy. (Photo: ۞ n o m a d E s, on Flickr)

‘El Tío’ – ‘The Uncle’… give him some tobacco, alcohol, coca leaves and he will be happy. (Photo: ۞ n o m a d E s, on Flickr)

For those unacquainted with coca leaf and more familiar with its processed derivative cocaine, this might sound suspicious, but chewers insist that the leaf itself does not deserve this suspicion. Decades of studies have found no serious negative consequences associated with coca leaf chewing in Andean communities and some even reported that “nor did it seem difficult for even habitual users to abandon the practice… In no way does it unhinge your mind. In no way.” insists Oyola, who chews coca himself. “It does not make you loose your faculties of thought or anything like that. What does change you is the drug [cocaine]. I repeat: coca leaf in its natural state is not a drug.”

While coca leaf is a popular pick-me-up, the deep spiritual and social significance surrounding it gives the plant a uniquely prized role for Bolivians. “It is truly a sacred leaf,” Oyola explains. “It is something that Mother Earth has blessed us with, giving us a plant that has so many nutritive powers. Our grandparents held ceremonies before chewing, including asking permission from Mother Earth, or Pachamama, thanking her for giving us this sacred, unique coca.” Her gift wards off sleep for tired workers and also holds mystical powers. “There are many amautas [roughly 'wise master' in Quechua] who can chew coca to see someone’s future. It’s like reading cards, but with coca leaf.”

Rituals and respect pervade the social sphere as well. Oyola illustrates with an example: “If they invite me to chew coca, I could never take the coca from them with a single hand. I always have to extend both hands.” Hurtado even writes, “One could say that the coca leaf is the backbone of the cultural structure of the Andean region.”

From Plant to Powder

After the alkaloid compound cocaine was first extracted from the coca plant in 1859, coca gained a whole new set of powers. Coca leaves contain about 0.2%-1% cocaine. Yet when refined with chemicals (including ammonia, kerosene, acetone, and sulphuric acid mix), cocaine in its purer state becomes an addictive, powerful, and dangerous stimulant. Cocaine promotes euphoria, an elevated mood, high self confidence, and feelings of sexuality but it can also cause depression, heart inflammation or palpitations, bleeding in the lungs, heart attacks, strokes, seizures, brain function complications, and even death.

Making Cocaine

Making Cocaine from leaves in the jungle (Photo: Jungle_Boy, on Flickr)

In 1961, both the coca leaf and cocaine appeared on the newly convened UN Single Convention on Narcotic Drugs’ list of substances “susceptible to wrongful use”, alongside opium and marihuana. The Single Convention was created to unify the international anti-narcotic effort, streamlining individual treaties and codifying international anti-narcotic tactics. The Single Convention’s stipulations afforded Bolivia 25 years to eradicate its coca cultivation, but the plant never disappeared; the issue of eradication has been under dispute since the prohibition took effect in 1989.

Colombia, Peru, and Bolivia are currently the world’s three coca-producing countries, with Colombia as the most prolific and Bolivia the least at 18% in 2008, according to the UN Office on Drugs and Crime. The United States is the world’s greatest consumer of cocaine, 90% of which travels from Colombia through Central America and Mexico. Most of Peruvian and Bolivian production bound for illicit trade moves to Europe, occasionally through West Africa en route; some winds up in Brazil or Argentina.

An Exception to Every Rule

In March 2009, President Morales held a pair of small green coca leaves before the UN Commission on Narcotic Drugs, the primary body with the power to craft international drug policy. “This is the coca leaf and this is not a drug,” he declared before the powers that outlawed it as exactly that. From the podium, he placed them in his mouth, chewed, and shrugged innocently. He was on a mission to reconcile international law, which classified a treasured ancestral tradition of his people as dangerous and illegal, with the reality that coca was alive and well in his country.

His presence that day had a lot to do with the small booklet he read from: Bolivia’s newly remodelled constitution. Ratified in February 2009, it leans towards traditional indigenous sentimentalities, including the protection of acullico, to which it dedicates an entire article: “The State protects native and ancestral coca as cultural heritage, a renewable natural resource of Bolivia’s biodiversity, and a factor of social cohesion; in its natural state it is not a narcotic. The law will govern its revalorisation, production, commercialisation, and industrialisation.” The article could not have placed Bolivian law more directly in conflict with international law.

When Morales rose to power in 2006, he took the coca leaf with him. As an Aymara, Morales is his country’s first indigenous leader and as a former coca grower himself, as well as the cocalero union leader, he owed his start in the political arena to his pro-coca activism. The topic was bound to rise to the forefront.

Evo Morales

Evo Morales (Photo: Alain Bachellier, on Flickr)

In June 2009, Morales brought a proposal before the Single Convention that would have legalised coca leaf internationally (cocaine would remain prohibited), with a year and a half for consideration. An opposition bloc made out of ‘friends of the convention’, comprised of Russia, Japan, France, the United Kingdom, Germany, Italy, Sweden, and Denmark and rallied by the United States vetoed the proposal in January 2011.

Not dissuaded, Morales adopted a different tactic. The following June, Bolivia withdrew from the Single Convention, citing the prohibition of coca leaf as objectionable. In January 2012, it petitioned for re-entry upon the condition that the convention make an exception within the Bolivian territory for the practice. Although it forfeited the original proposal’s universality, this method, per UN bylaws, could only be defeated if an entire third of the 184 member states—62 in total—filed objections within one year.

The ‘friends of the convention’ rallied again, this time mustering 18 votes against, the majority of them cocaine-consuming nations, once again led by the US. Their reasoning was not directly pitted against Bolivia’s cultural heritage claim, but rather, in some ways, concern over the threat of cocaine. Graciela Touze, president of Intercambios, an organisation devoted to the study of drug-related issues, points out that US/Bolivian relations are rocky, especially since Morales expelled the US ambassador and the DEA in 2008, but even “if it had been a country politically closer to the US, I think it would have been difficult for the US to support it because it would be very contradictory to its position on the topic of drug policy.” Indeed, a senior US State department official told the Associated Press after the opposition submission deadline, “we oppose Bolivia’s reservation and continue to believe it will lead to a greater supply of cocaine.”

Yet while many official memorandums of opposition cite the cocaine trade specifically, they also mention concerns that making an exception could “weaken” reigning international anti-drug efforts. “What this really is about is the fear to acknowledge that the current treaty framework is inconsistent, out-of-date, and needs reform,” says Martin Jelsma, coordinator of the Transnational Institute’s Drugs and Democracy programme. “Fundamentally, it had to do with not touching the conventions,” explains Touze. “One has to think of many countries’ opposition in terms of not wanting to open any possible gap that implies a revision of the current drug policy.”

Allowing Coca, Allowing Debate

Yet the bloc fell far short of threatening Bolivia’s readmission. On 11th January, it was official: the international community would recognise acullico’s legitimacy within Bolivian borders.

Bolivian Coca Growers Celebrate the United Nations Accepting The Chewing of Coca Leaf

Bolivian Coca Growers Celebrate the United Nations Accepting The Chewing of Coca Leaf (Photo: Matthew Straubmuller, on Flickr)

Upon hearing the news, Bolivians marched in the streets beneath Andean indigenous flags, wads of coca leaves in their mouths. Because UN enforcement of coca chewing would be unrealistic, the triumph is largely symbolic, but it is by no means insignificant. “I don’t think it will have any effect on illegal markets, on the production, distribution, trade, consumption of cocaine,” says Touze. “What could occur in the future is that what Bolivia has initiated becomes a precedent that allows us to stop looking at the conventions as sacred books that cannot be revised and open a debate regarding what to do about the drug problem.”

John Walsh, director of the Washington Office on Latin America drug policy program, echoes her thoughts: “Far from undermining the system, Bolivia has given the world a promising example that it is possible to correct historic errors and to adapt old drug control dogmas to today’s new realities.”

It also signals a possible power shift in the drug control arena away from prohibition philosophies and their proponents towards a more open discourse. “I can’t stress enough how big this is,” says Walsh. “Once again, the US snapped its fingers and told the rest of the world to get in line and oppose Bolivia’s move. But this time, while the UK joined them, most of the rest of the world just said, ‘no, thanks’.”

Touze thinks Bolivia’s coca victory is a signal that the dominant anti-drug discourse may be loosening.  “It seems to me that in this sense, Bolivia has inserted a wedge that can favour, sometimes in such closed fields as international organisations, a debate opening.” She mentions Colombia, Mexico, and Guatemala’s successful joint bid for a special drug policy session to be held in 2016 as an example that although “everything is very slow, everything is difficult”, within the realms of international organisations like the UN, “many other parts of the world are watching Latin America as a region that at least is starting to ask for a debate, to ask for reflection.”

The coca leaf has once again proved to hold extraordinary powers. It reenergises, induces highs, seduces to the point of addiction, and now it may have cracked a steadfast international anti-drug doctrine. At worst, Bolivia’s coca victory might erode drug trade limits, but as an example of more flexible policy-making, it may also make way for innovative advancements in international anti-narcotic efforts.

 

Click here to find out what Argentines and Latin Americans think about the UN’s recognition of coca leaf chewing in Bolivia.

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What do you think of the UN’s recognition of chewing coca leaves in Bolivia?


On 11th January, Bolivia won readmission to the United Nations Convention on Narcotic Drugs when the organisation voted to recognise the chewing of coca leaves as a legal, cultural practice in the Andean country.

The UN’s decision, which came after much campaigning by Bolivian president Evo Morales, was seen by many as a victory for the Andean people who have been cultivating and using the leaf for years as a stimulant, remedy to altitude sickness, and component of religious ceremonies. Critics of the legal recognition of coca worry that the plant will find its way to neighbouring countries in the processed form of cocaine, or paco.

The Argentina Independent asked Latin Americans from Argentina and abroad to share their opinions. 

Photos by Tomas Guarna

Juan L. Castañeda, 35, Audio Technician, Venezuela 

Juan-Castaneda

   They [Bolivians] have been chewing coca for many years, as well as Peruvians, they’ve been doing it for a long time. It’s a cultural situation more so than just drug use. I believe it’s fine, and that UN recognition is a success for the country. Chewing coca, as much in Peru as in Bolivia, is necessary to survive at that altitude. It could be [that Bolivian coca is used to produce cocaine], but you’re talking to someone that approves of the legalisation of drugs. Legalisation could eliminate the business aspect that leads to illicit activities. I’m against it being an illegal business in the hands of just a few, when it could be something legal and regulated by the governments of each country, the same way they regulate and sell tobacco, alcohol, and medicines, which are all drugs.

Iliana Prieto, 41, Psychologist, Jujuy 

Iliana-Prieto

I believe the leaf is something cultural, they consume the coca leaf, they don’t consume cocaine because the leaf is used in its pure state. Cocaine undergoes a sophisticated process that’s done in the United States, it’s them who process cocaine, not the Bolivians. Unfortunately, drug trafficking happens all over the world, but the principal market is in the United States, and what they want is to maintain that market. For that reason they demonise personal consumption in order to maintain their own business. 

 

Elias Callisaya Alcon, 21, Produce Vendor, Bolivia

Elias-Callisaya-Alcon Coca is like a medicine, and that’s how people use it. But if an excessive amount is produced, the majority of it will be converted into drugs. That’s what’s already happened in Bolivia. I’m from Bolivia, from Cochabamba, and that’s where most of it is produced and marketed. So whether or not it should be legal, I say no, that would just lead people to consume it more. 

Elsa Rodriguez, 71, Podiatrist, Almagro

Elsa-Rodriguez

The indigenous people of Bolivia have always chewed coca, they’ve been doing it for many years. I believe that in Bolivia, the chewing of the coca leaf doesn’t have any unnatural chemicals. But when it comes here and it’s sold to young people, it comes prepared as a drug, it has undergone a chemical process. And from here it goes to Europe, to wherever, because the government doesn’t have much control. There’s a lot of death in Argentina, murders, robberies that have to do with drugs, because addicts who depend on the drugs will resort to robbery or killing. 

Max Abella, 22, Administration Student, Caballito 

Max-Abella

I’m not against this, it seems fine to me, because the coca leaf is really not that serious. It’s natural, and it’s a part of the culture there. I support the decision, but if you’re going to legalise the chewing of coca, you should also put in place a system that is in charge of overseeing the process and making sure it is not used to produce cocaine, there have to be people checking and controlling it so that a drug market doesn’t develop.

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