Culture Shock! Bolivia - A Survival Guide to Customs and Etiquette

(Grace) #1
60 CultureShock! Bolivia

to barrel through blockades. I have witnessed episodes in
which gas-masked police attacked fi rst; giant green insects
with shimmering snouts moving in on the crowd.
In Bolivia, these confrontations are not nearly as menacing
as they look. Accompanying the protests are often hunger
strikes, and extreme measures include militants having
themselves nailed to a cross, as was the case with two prison
inmates in 2003, who were protesting lengthy pretrial stays
in prison and demanding a speedier justice system.
For the fi rst edition of this book, I wrote that, ‘In most
countries, a demonstration that chokes the city would be
met with far greater forms of repression,’ and I still believe
that if demonstrators succeeded
in paralysing New York City, we’d
see a lot of heads getting bashed
in. However, I’ve had to eat my
words, as lethal force became
a regular response during the
second presidency of Gonzalo
Sánchez de Lozada. The fact that
Goni was eventually discredited and forced to fl ee the country
tells us that mortal repression is no longer a sustainable
method of the political elites.
With Bolivia capable of earning an award for the most
militant population in the world, it would only be fair to give
these protesters a human face by profi ling one of their most
heroic fi gures.

Oscar Olivera


Oscar Olivera is one of 10 brothers and sisters. He worked as
a child to help support his family. He was diagnosed with a
mortal illness that should have left him dead by the age of 22.
He worked in various factories, was sometimes fi red for his
ideals, and went underground between 1980 and 1982 during
the García-Meza dictatorship. Since then, he has marched
with the cocaleros ( coca growers) and defended the rights of
domestics, shoeshine boys, the unemployed and students.
In 1999, the Bolivian political elites succumbed to ‘structural
adjustment’ demands of the World Bank by privatising the

Tear gas is the preferred method
for quelling social disturbance,
though in the fi rst fi ve years of
the new century, more than 100
protesters were killed by police or
by the military. On the other hand,
protestors killed no one.

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