Zürcher Nachrichten - With stones and slings, supporters of Bolivia's Morales gird for battle

EUR -
AED 3.996561
AFN 72.901733
ALL 98.526046
AMD 421.272213
ANG 1.961331
AOA 991.788876
ARS 1072.871472
AUD 1.659164
AWG 1.961263
AZN 1.854055
BAM 1.9584
BBD 2.197388
BDT 130.04684
BGN 1.962524
BHD 0.410115
BIF 3152.166566
BMD 1.08808
BND 1.440793
BOB 7.547263
BRL 6.386923
BSD 1.08828
BTN 91.529622
BWP 14.548784
BYN 3.561379
BYR 21326.35992
BZD 2.193663
CAD 1.520646
CDF 3141.834075
CHF 0.939938
CLF 0.0379
CLP 1045.775484
CNY 7.750069
CNH 7.74636
COP 4816.362534
CRC 558.058857
CUC 1.08808
CUP 28.834109
CVE 110.930143
CZK 25.448554
DJF 193.373932
DKK 7.490671
DOP 65.731315
DZD 144.348659
EGP 53.012569
ERN 16.321194
ETB 131.71246
FJD 2.475425
FKP 0.832565
GBP 0.841711
GEL 2.975941
GGP 0.832565
GHS 17.790526
GIP 0.832565
GMD 77.801881
GNF 9391.215308
GTQ 8.408279
GYD 227.579466
HKD 8.463682
HNL 27.256816
HRK 7.495813
HTG 143.213428
HUF 410.101365
IDR 17244.973386
ILS 4.083046
IMP 0.832565
INR 91.544325
IQD 1425.38426
IRR 45799.994199
ISK 149.556959
JEP 0.832565
JMD 172.499018
JOD 0.771562
JPY 166.503422
KES 140.362649
KGS 93.361362
KHR 4439.365099
KMF 493.825338
KPW 979.271384
KRW 1501.920195
KWD 0.333617
KYD 0.9069
KZT 532.218828
LAK 23856.145341
LBP 97508.952264
LKR 318.798858
LRD 208.857292
LSL 19.172377
LTL 3.212817
LVL 0.658169
LYD 5.244958
MAD 10.500382
MDL 19.479773
MGA 5021.487675
MKD 61.511523
MMK 3534.040058
MNT 3697.294469
MOP 8.717755
MRU 43.539547
MUR 49.899742
MVR 16.767718
MWK 1887.81846
MXN 22.069196
MYR 4.764161
MZN 69.539577
NAD 19.172373
NGN 1792.615173
NIO 39.987335
NOK 11.960672
NPR 146.442405
NZD 1.824413
OMR 0.417113
PAB 1.08837
PEN 4.106961
PGK 4.251943
PHP 63.505807
PKR 301.946113
PLN 4.381416
PYG 8597.414348
QAR 3.961158
RON 4.994725
RSD 117.546368
RUB 106.177129
RWF 1483.052478
SAR 4.087193
SBD 9.05275
SCR 15.364089
SDG 654.483872
SEK 11.534345
SGD 1.442907
SHP 0.832565
SLE 24.754214
SLL 22816.481435
SOS 621.293812
SRD 37.663916
STD 22521.050642
SVC 9.521641
SYP 2733.832898
SZL 19.172364
THB 36.889868
TJS 11.568324
TMT 3.808279
TND 3.366559
TOP 2.548395
TRY 37.349859
TTD 7.377031
TWD 34.750872
TZS 2932.374854
UAH 44.977514
UGX 3984.289738
USD 1.08808
UYU 45.069837
UZS 13954.621076
VEF 3941625.468227
VES 46.573289
VND 27528.41357
VUV 129.179027
WST 3.047911
XAF 656.826016
XAG 0.032257
XAU 0.0004
XCD 2.94059
XDR 0.817975
XOF 655.571864
XPF 119.331742
YER 272.40112
ZAR 19.204871
ZMK 9794.025888
ZMW 29.192697
ZWL 350.361183
  • RBGPF

    -1.4000

    59.6

    -2.35%

  • SCS

    0.1100

    12.14

    +0.91%

  • NGG

    0.6700

    64.26

    +1.04%

  • GSK

    0.1200

    36.88

    +0.33%

  • RIO

    0.4400

    65.33

    +0.67%

  • RELX

    0.8600

    47.08

    +1.83%

  • BCC

    1.1800

    134.21

    +0.88%

  • BTI

    0.0900

    35.07

    +0.26%

  • RYCEF

    0.2200

    7.08

    +3.11%

  • CMSC

    -0.0200

    24.53

    -0.08%

  • JRI

    -0.0300

    13.05

    -0.23%

  • BCE

    -0.1600

    32.1

    -0.5%

  • VOD

    0.0800

    9.35

    +0.86%

  • AZN

    0.2700

    71.42

    +0.38%

  • CMSD

    0.1500

    24.81

    +0.6%

  • BP

    -0.1300

    29.23

    -0.44%

With stones and slings, supporters of Bolivia's Morales gird for battle
With stones and slings, supporters of Bolivia's Morales gird for battle / Photo: AIZAR RALDES - AFP

With stones and slings, supporters of Bolivia's Morales gird for battle

Under a bridge in central Bolivia, supporters of former president Evo Morales, armed with slingshots and stones, practice their aim as they prepare to do battle with security forces.

Text size:

"Evistas," as Morales's supporters are known, have blocked nearly two dozen roads, mostly in his stronghold of Cochabamba, since October 14 to prevent his threatened arrest on rape charges.

The protests, which have caused widespread food and fuel shortages, have grown more radical with each passing day.

On Friday, a group of Morales supporters stormed a barracks in the central Chapare province and took a group of soldiers hostage.

In Parotani, which lies on the main road from Cochabamba to the capital La Paz, AFP saw a group of protesters being schooled in firing slingshots.

Carlos Flores, a 45-year-old agronomist, ordered them to spin their "huaracas" (slingshots, in the local Quechua language) over their heads.

- 'We are ready to fight' -

A black-clad youth with a face mask, who used the alias "Choque," whirled his sling and then released the stone, which whipped 100 meters (300 feet) through the air.

"This is our secret weapon... we inherited it from our grandparents," Flores told AFP proudly.

Since the protests began last month, 70 people have been injured in clashes between the demonstrators and police sent to clear the roads.

Most of the injured were police, some of whom sustained head injuries, according to the authorities.

In Parotani, a police officer nearly lost a foot. President Luis Arce said the officer was attacked with dynamite.

While the demonstrations initially focused on the rape charges against Morales, which he claims were fabricated to thwart his attempted political comeback, they have snowballed into a broader revolt against Arce's economic policies.

On Wednesday, Arce ordered an "immediate" end to the blockades and warned the government would "exercise its constitutional powers" to restore order, seen as a veiled threat to deploy the military.

"If he sends in his soldiers, we are ready to fight," said Flores.

- Plentiful stones -

In the rocky hills that surround Parotani, dozens of sentries scan the horizon for signs of the security forces.

The police want to clear the bridge to allow the passage of trucks supplying food and fuel to Cochabamba, where prices have risen due to shortages.

Shepherdess Nicolasa Sanchez, 59, makes new huaracas by threading sheep's wool between her bare toes and braiding them.

She makes about three a day.

"We could have thousands of huaracas as we will never run out of stones," says Juanita Ancieta, leader of a group of rural women from the outskirts of La Paz.

From time to time, loud explosions can be heard in the area.

"We ask the armed forces and the police not to attack their people... not to stain their hands with our blood," said Mariluz Ventura, representative of a union of Indigenous farmers.

- Bolivia's 'heart' -

The demonstrators said they were prepared for weeks, even months of "resistance."

In a sign the protests are becoming further entrenched, small shops selling clothes, cell phone accessories and even vinegar -- an antidote to tear gas -- have popped up around the bridge-turned-training ground. Out-of-town protesters have set up camp nearby.

"Cochabamba is the heart of Bolivia. That's why it is the site of the biggest blockade in the country," said Constancio Vallejos, a 37-year-old farmer who traveled around four hours from the east with a delegation of young farmers to join the protest.

Humberto Alegre, 31, heads one of the organizations that brings food to the protesters.

He said that he alone distributed about 500 rations a day.

Parotani has been without electricity and running water for days, leaving the townspeople reliant on water collected from the river.

"We are going to resist. This is the struggle we have begun. We will see it through to the end," said Flores.

A.Senn--NZN