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Caribbean-Latin America
Bolivia hands over state land to Indians
2006-06-05
More on the story from yesterday
Evo Morales, Bolivia's left-wing president, has launched a sweeping land reform plan by handing over about 9,600 square miles of state land to poor Indians. The move marked the start of Mr Morales's "agrarian revolution", just weeks after his government nationalised the natural gas industry, giving foreign-owned firms six months to negotiate new contracts or leave. "We want to change Bolivia together," Mr Morales told the thousands of Indians gathered in the eastern city of Santa Cruz to receive land titles.

"Getting back the land means we're getting back all the natural resources, we're nationalising all the natural resources."

Onlookers chanted "Evo" and waved Bolivian and rainbow whipala flags (yours for only $95.00 plus shipping), which represent 500 years of Indian struggle. The ceremony came after talks broke down between Mr Morales and agribusiness leaders over his reforms, which involves the distribution of 77,000 square miles of public land - an area roughly twice the size of Portugal - in the next five years. The government is studying the redistribution of unproductive private land, while one farmers' organisation has said it would form "self-defence" groups to prevent such seizures. The redistribution plans are heightening long-standing tension between the prosperous residents of Bolivia's agricultural lowlands and the poorer, mostly Indian people of the western high plains.

"The greatest need right now is the recuperation of our territory," Wilson Chacaray, a Guarani Indian leader, told the crowd. "The landowners, the foreign companies, the political parties that have dominated this country took our land from us and that's why we live in misery."
Posted by:Seafarious

#12  Doesn't seem so.
Posted by: john   2006-06-05 21:56  

#11  Ima wonder ifn he related to Bobby J.
Posted by: 6   2006-06-05 17:17  

#10  Wait till Evo Morales discovers that Naveen Jindal isn't a native

Naveen Jindal is a member of parliament, India since 2004 representing the constituency of Kurukshetra in the state of Haryana. He is a member of the Congress Party. He is an industrialist with operations located in Madhya Pradesh and Chattisgarh. He runs the rail & steel and power businesses of the Jindal Group, the fourth largest private sector Indian business group by assets and sales turnover.

Prior to 2002, the Flag code of India did not permit flying of the Flag of India on non governmental institutions. In 2001, a case was filed against Naveen Jindal for flying the Flag of India atop his company building. He said that he was inspired by his American friends displaying their flag during his college days in USA and he believed that flying the national flag should be the right of every Indian. He took the case to the Delhi High Court and the Supreme Court of India and won both cases. The Supreme Court ordered the Government of India to set aside a committee to look into this matter. Finally on January 26, 2002 (India's Republic Day), private citizens were allowed to fly India's flag inside and atop their buildings and institutions. His story was reported widely in the Indian media which hailed him as a liberator.

Naveen Jindal excels in skeet shooting and holds a national record. He also plays polo.
Posted by: john   2006-06-05 16:20  

#9  And even Indians (from India) are getting into the act

Bolivia awards El Mutun mine deal to India's Jindal

Bolivia's leftist government on Thursday awarded Jindal Steel and Power Ltd. a contract to develop El Mutun, a site believed to contain one of the world's biggest iron-ore deposits.

Officials said Jindal vowed initially to invest a total of $2.3 billion to mine ore and produce steel -- the biggest investment in a single project in Bolivian history and a boost for the government of President Evo Morales, which nationalized the energy industry last month.

Posted by: john   2006-06-05 16:20  

#8  uh.....Take Five
Posted by: Dave Brubeck   2006-06-05 15:05  

#7  Ukraine, take four.
Posted by: Steve White   2006-06-05 14:49  

#6  Rhodesia, take three.
Posted by: Ometer Angereger1043   2006-06-05 12:06  

#5  Nigeria, take two.
Posted by: Redneck Jim   2006-06-05 10:30  

#4  Gee, I dan't see THAT one comin'...

Oh wait. Yes I did...
Posted by: mojo   2006-06-05 10:02  

#3  2010: The award for the most rapid transformation from a country to a toilet goes to....Evo Morales!
Posted by: mcsegeek1   2006-06-05 09:59  

#2  "Getting back the land means we're getting back all the natural resources, we're nationalising all the natural resources."

That's what Mexico did in the early half of the 20th Century. What did it get them other than an economy that has to rely up expelling a large portion of their own population and a dependency upon the money those send back to keep the economy afloat even though the country is blessed with abundant arable land, mineral resources, and vast petroleum reserves. Mexico is only able to rank eleventh in GDP. South Korea whoÂ’s GDP was basically zero by the end of the Korean War, with an area the size of Florida, about 50 million people and no natural resources and very limited arable land is number thirteen in GDP. Proof that intelligence is finite, there are just more people in the world today.
Posted by: Photing Elmeating5120   2006-06-05 08:10  

#1  "Farmin B. Hard, call your office!"
Posted by: PBMcL   2006-06-05 00:25  

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