Morales says elites resent Indian power

by angryindian | September 17, 2007 at 01:45 pm
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Morales says elites resent Indian power

Morales says elites resent Indian power

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Nominated for the Nobel Prize for his efforts in a peaceful transition of power to the majority Aboriginal population, Evo Morales points out that bias against the Indigenous is still alive and well despite claims to the contrary in his country.  For the Indigenist/Indigenismo movement worldwide, this prejudice against the true owners of the their respective lands was recently shown in the United Nations vote on Indigenous rights when the United States, Canada, Australia and New Zealand voted against the
adoption, stating that in their view it 'goes too far' in recognizing
the rights of Indigenous Peoples. 


But shooting up a nation full of arabs does not go to far in the quest for petroleum in Western Asia.  Will Bolivia's considerable oil reserves spark another regional conflict?  - The Angryindian

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Morales says elites resent Indian power | WORLD | NEWS | tvnz.co.nz: "Bolivian President Evo Morales says wealthy elites are trying to block his leftist reforms because they do not like having an Indian leading the South American country. Less than two years since becoming Bolivia's first indigenous leader, Morales is facing fierce opposition from rightist rivals and sometimes-violent street protests have flared in the poor nation in recent months. Morales, who herded llamas in the Andes as a boy before farming coca, said in an interview discrimination persisted against the indigenous majority in Bolivia. 'What worries me most are the actions of the oligarchy, the dirty war. Discrimination continues,' he said late on Saturday on a military plane from the Amazon town of Riberalta. 'In some cities, groups of people talk about wearing out the Indian, knocking the Indian out...They cannot accept that an Indian is governing well,'
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Heritage
Heritage
flagged this story as Good Stuff

at 06:55 on September 18th, 2007

angryindian, I like this story. It's good stuff.

I wasn't surprised that Australia and the US voted against the Declaration on the Rights of Indigenous People but New Zealand's oposition really surprised me. 

More here: http://www.scoop.co.nz/stories/PA0709/S00266.htm 

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