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[Marxism] A green light to transform Ecuador



Friday, November 23, 2007
A green light to transform Ecuador


By electing a Constituent Assembly on Sept. 30, Ecuadoreans gave
President Rafael Correa an ample majority, with which he has carte
blanche to change the rules of the political-economic game. Although
badly defeated at the polls, the right immediately stood on war
footing to oppose the official project: a regulated economy, social
redistribution, a participative democracy, regional integration,
"21st-Century socialism". But the winds of change are blowing
throughout the region.

By Hernando Calvo Ospina Progreso Weekly, 22-28 November, 2007

"Now is the beginning of the challenge of change," says Rocío
Peralbo, a social communicator and well-known human rights militant.
"All the conditions are favorable. We won't have anyone else to blame
if we fail."

The history of Ecuador had not seen a triumph as overwhelming as that
obtained by the Alianza País movement on Sept. 30. That day, the
people who must draft a new Constitution were elected. Seventy
percent of the voters placed their trust on the candidates who share
the project with President Rafael Correa Delgado. With 80
representatives out of 130, they will have an absolute majority in
the Constituent Assembly. Therefore, the chief of state can now "re-
found the Republic" and activate a model of development that will
break away from neoliberalism.

Alianza País began as a project in late 2005 "not as a group on
enlightened people but as a group that fed from the struggles and
efforts of many social and political sectors," says former Energy and
Mines Minister and future president of the Constituent Assembly
Alberto Acosta. In the November 2006 elections the movement took
Correa, an economist and educator, to the presidency. "We went from
being specialists in protest to enacting the proposal. With the
presidency, we had to begin to build."

In his simple office in Carondelet Palace, a colonial-type building
that is the seat of government, President Correa states: "We have
begun a 'Citizens Revolution' that must take us to radical, deep and
swift changes of the structures of this country, because the current
ones don't work."

Taxi drivers, newspaper vendors, bootblacks, officer workers -- all
of them have faith in the project led by the president. Ecuador is a
country that has had eight presidents in 10 years; most of its
citizens do not trust Congress, which they consider incompetent and
corrupt. Aware of the Congress' discredit, Alianza País did not
submit any candidates to the latest legislative elections, choosing
to put all its bets on the Constituent Assembly.

The results for the Constituent Assembly were a decisive rejection of
"partidocracy," as President Correa calls that parties that dominated
the political scene. The vote reflected the collapse of those who
have really been fiefdoms, groups directed by strongmen without
ideological support. Monsignor Eugenio Arellano, who was born in
Spain, has lived in Ecuador for more than 30 years, "always very
close to the people." For that reason, he says he knows "what 90
percent of the inhabitants think."

"This new government has conveyed a very big hope to the people: to
radically improve their living conditions." He says the Ecuadorean
Church has taken a position: "We must support, accompany, become
spokesmen for that hope." But, as the popular saying goes, "the road
twists like a snake."

Ecuador is estimated to have 13 million inhabitants. The National
Institute of Statistics and Census (INEC) says that in 2006 12.9
percent of the citizens did not have $1.06 a day to cover their
nutritional requirements and thus landed in the group of "indigents."
The average percentage of people who live in chronic poverty is 38.3.
Sixty percent of the people are underemployed. According to the same
source, inequality is enormous: the wealthiest sector's consumption
level is 35.5 percent; the poorest sector's is 1.9 percent. Twenty-
six percent of the families borrowed money to pay for medical care,
buy food, pay for education, etc.

The immediate source of resources for the execution of the
development projects espoused by President Correa is oil. Ecuador is
the fifth-largest oil producer in Latin America. The oil history in
this country has been a bit peculiar.

Full: http://ecuador-rising.blogspot.com/2007/11/green-light-to-
transform-ecuador.html
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