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Abstract
On 17 July 1980 Bolivia suffered the most brutal and bloody military coup in its history. The leader of the coup, General Luis Garcia Meza, thus brought to an end Bolivia's faltering attempts to establish parliamentary democracy. The coup's purpose was not simply to prevent the inauguration of the newly elected civilian government. Its broader aim was to do away with all opposition, from progressive clergy to trade union, peasant and left-wing organizations and to establish a right-wing military regime in the style of the dictatorships in neighbouring Argentina and Chile. Bolivia: Coup d'Etat traces Bolivia's history from the 1952 Revolution to the July 1980 coup and its aftermath. It analyzes the country's political forces and socio-economic structures and chronicles the Bolivian miners' traditional struggle against the armed forces. It also describes the violations of basic human and democratic rights and examines the nature and origins of the present regime.
Table of Contents
Section Title | Page | Action | Price |
---|---|---|---|
Title Page | 1 | ||
Copyright Page | 2 | ||
Table of Contents | 3 | ||
Map | 4 | ||
Bolivia in Brief | 5 | ||
Statistics | 5 | ||
Chronology | 7 | ||
Political Parties | 11 | ||
Trade Unions | 17 | ||
The Armed Forces | 19 | ||
Coup d'Etat | 21 | ||
The 1952 Revolution | 22 | ||
Dictatorship and Populism | 28 | ||
The Banzer Dictatorship | 40 | ||
The Democratic Experiment | 51 | ||
The Coup | 69 | ||
Conclusion | 82 | ||
Bibliography | 84 | ||
Appendix | 85 | ||
The Assault on the COB | 85 |