By FRANCK GAUDICHAUD
On June 22, the Paraguayan
Senate removed centre-left President Fernando Lugo, following a procedure of
“political judgment of destitution”: a parliamentary manoeuvre that is
admittedly provided for by the Constitution, but whose expeditious nature (done
within 24 hours!) has been widely denounced by Paraguayan social organizations
and by several governments of neighbouring countries. Evo Morales (Bolivia)
denounced what he considered to be a “parliamentary coup.”
Lugo, known as “the bishop of
the poor,” [he was a former Catholic bishop] who was elected in 2008 with the
support of the popular classes against the candidate of the oligarchy, accepted
the reality of this destitution, while denouncing an illegitimate act which
“damages Paraguay and its democracy.” The Right has thus sought—and been
able—to use to its advantage a bloody confrontation in the Northeast of the
country, which recently led to the death of 17 people [11 landless peasants and
six police officers who had been trying to evict them], dramatic events which
could, according to several sources, be the result of police provocation.
Three years after the coup in
Honduras, the ruling classes are once again trying to keep the initiative and
especially to stop social and peasant struggles: the key to this country
remains the control of land, in a situation where 80 per cent of the land
belongs to 2 per cent of the population, as well as to powerful transnational
agribusinesses such as Cargill and Monsanto. The Paraguayan people is thus
suffering the disastrous ecological, political, and social consequences of a
narrowly-based economy: exports of soya beans (often transgenic) represent 40
per cent of national exports and are worth more than $ 2 billion.
The Lugo government was, from
the beginning of its term of office, marked by weakness and beset by many
difficulties. His election victory undoubtedly marked a political turning point
and represented a broad aspiration for social and democratic transformation,
ending 60 years of hegemony of the Colorado Party, the corrupt and reactionary
pillar of the dictatorship of general Stroessner (1954-1989).
However, without a powerful
political party to support him, without an organized social base and very much
in a minority in Parliament, Lugo chose to negotiate with the liberal elites
and with defectors from the Right in order to govern. Today, following this
destitution, it is precisely his former Vice-President, Federico Franco, member
of the Authentic Radical Liberal Party (a conservative formation), who takes
over the Executive, for the greater happiness of the traditional oligarchy and
transnational capital.
In the end, Lugo opted more for
the institutional set-up and for parliamentary negotiations, abandoning little
by little an ambitious programme of reforms, rather than relying on a social
movement, admittedly still very weak and fragmented, but with a huge potential
of organization from below. This is a major lesson for the progressive
governments of the region, at a moment when in Bolivia tensions are building
up, with – very recently - police mutinies that some left activists feared
could turn into a coup.
While strongly condemning the
“legal” coup and any repression of social struggles, it is urgent to mobilize
in a unitary way to denounce the situation in Paraguay and the existence of a
de facto government.
We also call for support for the
ongoing peasant mobilizations for a radical land reform, the only way to begin
to really democratize Paraguayan society.
From International
Viewpoint. Franck Gaudichaud is a lecturer at the University of
Grenoble-3 and a member of the New Anticapitalist Party in France. He is
co-president of the association France Latin America and is on the editorial
committee of the site www.rebelion.org, and in the review ContreTemps (contact:
franck.gaudichaud@u-grenoble3.fr).
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