April 28th, 2009

Bolivian Drama: A Good Summary

Damir Marusic

The New York Times has a decent summary of what’s known about the Eduardo Rozsa Flores story in Bolivia. The one new detail in the story is an insurance report which casts some doubt on the government’s version of what happened.

Mr. García Linera, the vice president, at first said the three were killed in a 30-minute gunfight, but an insurance report filed for the hotel and obtained by La Razón, a newspaper, apparently found no signs of an exchange of gunfire. Two men taken captive at the hotel, Elod Toazo, a Hungarian, and Mario Tadik, a Bolivian, seem to have surrendered without a fight.

“What happened was the killing of three people who were sleeping, which means murder,” said Óscar Ortiz, president of Bolivia’s Senate and a top opponent of Mr. Morales.

Alfredo Rada, a senior minister, made things worse when he went on television with images of men in Santa Cruz clasping weapons, claiming they were linked to those killed. But the men in the photos, lifted from a Facebook page, debunked the claim by explaining that they practiced “airsoft,” a game in which participants fire at one another with pellet guns.

A related quibble: Josh Marshall calls it “one of the Stories You Need the Times For”. Not so! The Wall Street Journal has been doing good work on this story all last week, whereas the Times only ran a brief blurb two weeks ago and is now merely playing catch-up. Coincidentally, it seems as if almost all newspapers outside of the Journal have lost circulation in the last six months.

April 23rd, 2009

International Brotherhood of the Bourgeoisie*

Damir Marusic

Fascinating story unraveling in the pages of the Wall Street Journal about one Eduardo Rózsa Flores, a Hungarian national who was killed last week by police in Santa Cruz, Bolivia. According to the Bolivian authorities, he was plotting to overthrow Evo Morales’ government and assassinate Morales himself. According to an interview Flores gave to a Hungarian TV show a few months ago, he was going to go organize a legal militia within Santa Cruz in order to defend the province against Morales’ attempts to found a communist state.

Flores seems to have been a colorful character. An author, an actor, and a professional revolutionary, he starred in a semi-fictionalized movie of his own life (now added to my Netflix queue). From watching the first few minutes of the film on Google Video, it seems like he grew up with impeccable leftist revolutionary credentials, with an idealist Jewish playwright father who got kicked out of the Bolivian Communist Party for his clandestine work with Che Guevara in the jungles.

What changed him from a fiery revolutionary to a establishmentarian counter-revolutionary, one wonders. Could it be that totalitarian communists are taking the place of fascists in those fevered minds looking to pick up arms and fight for a cause? More to come as I find it.


*Full credit to Thomas Rickers for the coinage.