![](https://nostr.build/i/nostr.build_7a9442bb5ca48b7a7883510267374e84fecc0838b86a31500c994e1db1dd6cff.jpeg)
@ Pilgart Explores
2024-11-26 19:15:59
![](https://substackcdn.com/image/fetch/w_2400,c_limit,f_auto,q_auto:good,fl_progressive:steep/https%3A%2F%2Fsubstack-post-media.s3.amazonaws.com%2Fpublic%2Fimages%2F9d4c4dcb-88d8-4455-914f-f335756d86a8_1772x1148.jpeg) *Evo Morales wins 2005 elections*
### [Bolivia my second home](https://www.youtube.com/playlist?list=PLZ_iYJDDEhonSEBflUL6olXMEiHh4F-On)
Bolivia, a country that I consider a second home, a country that is near and dear to my heart, unfortunately Bolivia is arguably also South America's Most Troubled Nation.\
When Evo Morales won the presidency in 2005, Bolivia experienced a short lived economic boost, in large parts due to a global boom in commodities prices around 2008-2012. Evo Morales made sure to take take the glory for this, when in fact his communist policies and nationalisation of most industries, particularly the natural gas industry has led the country to become the economic basket case that it is today.\
Bolivia is running out of natural gas and has become a net importer, despite having huge natural gas reserves. Bolivia's central bank is close to going bankrupt, it is running out of US dollars and foreign currencies for trade. Bolivia sees huge lines outside petrol stations, just to get 5 Litres of gasoline.\
-This is the context as I hit the road to go explore, what is really going on in Bolivia these days.
### [**On The Road - Through a Troubled Bolivia**](https://youtu.be/65ZRTUgUrU4)
“AIQUILE! AIQUILE!” The girl who sells the bus tickets yells the destination into the Bolivian morning air. “AIQUILE YA SALE!”\
I will never grow tired of the feeling I get, when I buy a ticket with one of these minibuses to a destination that I barely know anything about. If I could find a way to put that feeling in a pill, it would be that next drug to take over the world. Of that I’m sure, this is my definition of adventure.\
As we head out of Sucre, Bolivia’s capital city towards Aiquile our destination the landscape becomes ever more impressive. Deep valleys with no end in sight. At the bottom of valleys it’s hot, we most have dropped about 1000 meters in altitude. A few mountain goats stroll around by the dry river bed in search of water. A street dog runs out in front of the minibus. Our driver beeps his horn like a mad man, the dog just kinda stands there looking at the approaching minibus, as if to say “I’m the boss here”. 10 meters before the sure death of the dog it makes the sensible choice, running to the side.
![](https://substackcdn.com/image/fetch/w_2400,c_limit,f_auto,q_auto:good,fl_progressive:steep/https%3A%2F%2Fsubstack-post-media.s3.amazonaws.com%2Fpublic%2Fimages%2F715b2911-3844-4da3-8599-3cf0b54d8bd7_3150x2520.jpeg) A Bolivian Valley
We pass a spot where the mountain side looks to have caved in, rocks and mud is still on the road, making our driver slow down, he has been riding like he stole the bus so far. “There were roadblocks here just last week” the driver says to me. So this isn’t the results of last weeks mudslide, this is a result of the political unrest going on in the country at the moment.\
For the past month Evo Morales, a narcotrafficker and former president of Bolivia, has been setting up roadblocks with the help of his supporters, all over Bolivia at critical infrastructure points. The aim… To starve the people of Bolivia. To cause hardship and chaos. Ultimately the aim is to become president of Bolivia, once again. But this time he won’t be leaving, this he will become a dictator - that is of course if Evo Morales is successful in his mission to force the hand of the current government, which is formed by his own part MAS (The Movement To Socialism).
### Evo Morales & Bolivia: A Love Story Gone Wrong
\
The Bolivian Constitution says an individual can be president for a maximum of two terms. Evo Morales has already managed to be the president of Bolivia for three terms. Well how did he manage that then? When he was first elected in 2005 Bolivia was called Republica de Bolivia (the Republic of Bolivia) and during his first term Evo Morales changed Bolivia official name and the Constitution to the name of Estado Plurinacional de Bolivia, which means something like: The Multinational State of Bolivia. This was done to give more recognition to the indigenous culture of the country, at least that was how it was sold to the Bolivians at the time. Little did they know that Evo Morales most likely had other plans in mind already back in 2005.
Evo Morales then won his second term, then when he came to the third term Evo wanted to run again but the opposition here in Bolivia said “No you can't do that” but Evo was able to defend why he was able to do so by saying:
> “*Hold on! We changed the constitution and the country's name so technically I was in my first term I was president in the old country of the Republic of Bolivia and I've been president now one term in the new country of the Plurinational State of Bolivia so I should be able to have two two consecutive terms as president of the pl national state of Bolivia*”.
A claim Evo Morales was able to defend so when Evo Morales ran for president for a third time he won again.
In 2019 when it was time for elections once again Evo Morales didn't want to accept that he needed to pass on the torch to someone else. Evo Morales once again decided to run for his 4th term (third term under he new constitution) but this time there was election fraud in the picture. Evo Morales had been heavily contested by huge demonstrations from the growing opposition in Bolivia. They were fed up with his antics and wanted him gone.\
I was living in Bolivia from 2018 to 2020. I owned a restaurant & pub in Bolivia governmental capital La Paz. The 2019 election went down something like this: It was Evo Morales against a man called Carlos Mesa. During the election night when the results were coming in, they were neck and neck, 50/50, very even. Then suddenly out of nowhere the election results stopped coming in. People got very skeptical and over that night demonstrations erupted all over Bolvia. The people already knew what Evo Morales was up to.
![](https://substackcdn.com/image/fetch/w_1456,c_limit,f_auto,q_auto:good,fl_progressive:steep/https%3A%2F%2Fsubstack-post-media.s3.amazonaws.com%2Fpublic%2Fimages%2F7204dfd6-be33-4751-8a21-9e5b32eebb36_992x558.jpeg) Evo Morales (left) & Carlos Mesa (right)\
Sure enough! The next morning when the election results came back online, Evo Morales was magically winning the election. This as you can imagine led to further massive demonstrations in all of Bolivia, tear gas thrown everywhere including on me and into the restaurant.
![](https://substackcdn.com/image/fetch/w_2400,c_limit,f_auto,q_auto:good,fl_progressive:steep/https%3A%2F%2Fsubstack-post-media.s3.amazonaws.com%2Fpublic%2Fimages%2Fb4a4b364-1490-4d9d-8d9e-ed5ee2813bda_3780x2520.jpeg) Demonstrations in La Paz, 2019 | Photo from my old Instagram
After hard fought protest and lots of tear gas Evo Morales eventually fled the Bolivia, via Mexico to his communist brothers in Cuba. In the aftermath of Evo Morales fleeing the country back then, there was an interim government put in charge. They were supposed to run the next elections. This interim government was from the opposition so you might say; didn't they achieve exactly what they wanted?\
No they didn't. The interim government started becoming very very heavy-handed on some of the indigenous people here in Bolivia, lots of heavy-handed military arresting opposition party members, throwing them in jail etc.
![](https://substackcdn.com/image/fetch/w_1456,c_limit,f_auto,q_auto:good,fl_progressive:steep/https%3A%2F%2Fsubstack-post-media.s3.amazonaws.com%2Fpublic%2Fimages%2F9e5b5446-76cf-48c0-9460-71c4aede49c7_710x399.jpeg) Jeanine Áñez, Head of the interim government
The consequences of this was felt in subsequent 2022 elections. Evo morales's party, MAS, won back the presidency. This is how a man called Luis Arce is now the president in in Bolivia. When Luis Arce, the current president and party member of Evo Morales's party the Movement Towards Socialism, won the elections in 2021 Evo Morales saw saw his opportunity and came back to Bolivia.\
Evo Morales was obviously expecting to manage this Luis Arce as his little puppet but Luis Arce had other ideas.
![](https://substackcdn.com/image/fetch/w_2400,c_limit,f_auto,q_auto:good,fl_progressive:steep/https%3A%2F%2Fsubstack-post-media.s3.amazonaws.com%2Fpublic%2Fimages%2Fbc72a28d-0001-4724-8ab9-c6f3cfcb6afd_1200x839.jpeg) Luis Arce (Left) & Evo Morales (Right)
Luis Arce now wants to be the president in Bolivia, Arce is not much different than Evo Morales just that he's not a narcotrafficker as well, but he does like the power.\
As Evo Morales figured out he couldn't manage Luis Arce as his little puppet, problems and discussions and eventually roadblocks blocking the whole country erupted within the party of the Movement Towards Socialism. This is the situation in which we found ourselves today here in Bolivia. A country that is being kept hostage by it’s former president, who wants to become a dictator to secure his business as a narcotrafficker, mixed with his former friend, his former Finance Minister Luis Arce, who wants to stay in power and keep managing the country as a communist state.
![Financial charts from Trading Economics ](https://substackcdn.com/image/fetch/w_474,c_limit,f_auto,q_auto:good,fl_progressive:steep/https%3A%2F%2Fsubstack-post-media.s3.amazonaws.com%2Fpublic%2Fimages%2F1cd84b6d-7e5a-4052-802f-6e09fa9ddc86_1200x820.png) Financial State of Bolivia 🇧🇴
The only issue with this for Luis Arce is; Bolivia has become a classic story of a communist government, that has been hostile to foreign capital and foreign investment leading the country into near bankruptcy. There's now no longer enough US dollars in the central bank's bank account to be able to purchase Diesel and petrol from in the global market. There's not been invested any money into producing more natural gas, nat-gas used to be the main way for Bolivia to get dollars into the country. By exporting their gas to Argentina and to Brazil, the neighbouring countries here in the region, but nowadays as I said; Bolivia is running out of gas, Bolivia is running out of dollars, it can't buy petrol, it can't buy diesel and inflation is starting to rise. Bolivia has seen the rise of a black market for dollars in the country and it is growing.
### On The Ground in Aiquile, Bolivia
We have made it to my destination Aiquile. A little indigenous Bolivian village, most famous for being the homeland of the Charango, a sort of Ukulele like guitar, famous in music across the Andean Mountains, from Colombia in the north to Argentina and Chile in the south. It is a little guitar with 10 strings, capable of producing the most exquisite high pitch notes in the hands of a charismatic Andean singer song writer, who manipulates the 10 strings with precision, as he tells passionate stories of life, love, corruption and longing for green pastures to an attentive crowd.\
The mission is clear to me as I step out of the bus and into the streets of Aiquile. I am starving! So set off in search of the local central market, in Bolivian villages the central market is always were you find the best food, forget about restaurants. Restaurants in places like this only serve terrible fried chicken, with potato chips that are about as soggy, as my socks after a long day of walking.
![](https://substackcdn.com/image/fetch/w_2400,c_limit,f_auto,q_auto:good,fl_progressive:steep/https%3A%2F%2Fsubstack-post-media.s3.amazonaws.com%2Fpublic%2Fimages%2F8025d9d5-a20f-43f3-a4f0-068181e6a522_2879x1616.png) The Lady who cooked my lunch
There is an army crickets in the trees making a right racket. The Central Market is busy, the Bolivian ladies race around the market area. Some earn their living as vendors others are here as housewife’s shopping for lunch ingredients. All of them are dressed in wide colourful skirts, woven shirts and bowler hats resting on top of their heads. Legend has it that the Bowler hats made it to Bolivia in the 1930’s, when the Bolivian railway company ordered a batch from a hat maker in Manchester. When the bowler hats arrived in Bolivia, they were to small to fit the heads of the men working at the railway company. Quick on his feet and English director of the Railway company instead convinced the local Bolivian women that small Bowler hats floating on top of the head, was the latest fashion in Europe. Shortly after all the tiny Bowler hats had been sold and many more batches had been ordered.
![](https://substackcdn.com/image/fetch/w_2400,c_limit,f_auto,q_auto:good,fl_progressive:steep/https%3A%2F%2Fsubstack-post-media.s3.amazonaws.com%2Fpublic%2Fimages%2F6d682850-5d95-4834-b0d5-516c1e3ac0b4_3150x2335.jpeg) [A Typical Bolivian Lady](https://buymeacoffee.com/pilgartexplores/extras)
In Aiquile I was surprised that I would struggle to find any outspoken supporters of Evo Morales. Aiquile after all is a small indigenous village, of the sort in which Evo Morales used to enjoy massive support. Nowadays the mood seems to be one of indifference at best and outright animosity towards Evo, at worst.\
One man says to me: “They must find a solution through conversation - We can’t keep going on like this, roadblock after roadblock”. Another tells me over his corn soup: “I don’t support any of the two”. It was when I entered a shop to buy myself a beer to wash down my lunch, that cold shivers of disgust and fear for Bolivia’s future started running down my spine. The shop lady told me that the roadblocks around the country aren’t conducted by locals of each place, in support of Evo Morales. No, in fact it is Evo Morales using guerilla tactics, sending his supporters from his home are of Chapare, Bolivia’s Cocaine producing region, to the rest of the country to block strategically important infrastructure points. This discovery left me disheartened, as I sat sipping on my beer waiting for another minibus to take me back to Sucre that afternoon.
Things are not looking pretty for Bolivia, I prey with all my heart that Bolivia won’t become South America's next Venezuela, but I fear Bolivia might and so do many Bolivians.
*Leave a comment down below with your thoughts and reflections, maybe you have been to Bolivia or you might want to go someday, feel free to ask question in the comments section below.*