From the Los Angeles Times
In Peru's high plains, Chavez is exalted
Many in a poor southern enclave feel closer
in spirit to Venezuela than to Lima and Washington.
By Patrick J. McDonnell
Los Angeles Times Staff Writer
March 9, 2008
PUNO, PERU —
His private office features a life-size photo of Venezuelan President Hugo Chavez.
He dons bright red shirts, mimicking Chavez's trademark hue. He calls
himself a proud foot soldier in Chavez's Bolivarian Revolution.
But the top elected official of this stunning but destitute wind-swept
corner of southern Peru flatly denies that Chavez is bankrolling his
leftist leadership.
"I wish Venezuela could help us out," said Hernan Fuentes,
regional president, or governor, of Puno province. "We could use their
gasoline for our trucks. . . . We could use more teachers, doctors."
Throughout Latin American, U.S. officials and allied governments fret
about Chavez's spreading influence, be it political, diplomatic or
financial. From Mexico to Chile, Washington and Caracas vie for sway in
a high-stakes battle for the hearts and minds of Latin Americans.
Matching the invective spouting from the two capitals are proxy
struggles at campuses, union headquarters, city halls and living rooms.
Pro-Chavez solidarity groups and neighborhood associations known as
Bolivarian Circles condemn yanqui "imperialism," while critics
denounce Chavez's model as creeping authoritarianism.
When Colombia, a close U.S. ally, attacked a Colombian rebel base in
neighboring Ecuador this month, Chavez mobilized troops and warned of
war. Colombia in turn accused Chavez of backing leftist guerrillas.
But Latin America's preeminent ideological conflict of the early 21st
century has mostly been a battleground of words and threats.
The new Latin American version of the Cold War is especially fierce
here in Peru, where President Alan Garcia -- a U.S.-bashing leftist
firebrand during his first presidential stint from 1985 to 1990 -- is
now a staunch Washington ally and apostle of free trade. Garcia's 1980s
leadership left Peru nearly bankrupt and torn by guerrilla war,
outcomes that experts say probably shifted the president to a more
pragmatic, center-right stance in his political encore.
Like pro-U.S. Colombian President Alvaro Uribe, Garcia detests Chavez,
whom he derided as a "midget dictator with a big wallet" during the
hotly contested Peruvian presidential campaign in 2006. Chavez in turn
labeled Garcia a liar, thief and U.S. lackey. Garcia ultimately beat
back a challenge from a Chavez supporter, generating a deep sigh of
relief at the White House.
Still, the Venezuelan leader's influence remains robust in Peru,
especially in the desolate southern high-plains altiplano along the
shores of Lake Titicaca, ancestral homeland of the Quechua and Aymara
peoples. Most residents are of indigenous ancestry; about eight in 10
live in poverty.
A rough, homespun variant of leftist politics predominates here
and elsewhere in Peru's southern highlands. Anti-government protests
regularly shut down roads and cities, including one last month that
closed the tourist mecca of Cuzco. Officials in Lima see the handiwork
of Chavez sympathizers. The political militancy is the product of
decades of alienation from the central government, religious and
indigenous activism, guerrilla warfare and violent clashes over land.
Anti-U.S. rhetoric is abundant and Garcia is widely disliked.
This chilly, hardscrabblePeru is far removed from the export-fueled,
balmy coastal boomtown that is the capital of Lima. Many in the south
eke out a living as subsistence farmers, planting potatoes, beans and
other crops and raising cows and sheep. Their children migrate to the
cities.
"We in Puno are like another country," said Fuentes, 47, speaking
in nearby Juliaca at his family-run radio station, where a giant photo
of him and Chavez peers from a wall. "We don't see the economic bonanza
of Lima. The benefits don't trickle down here."
Just down the road is Bolivia, a nation with similar demographics and
geography (Puno sits at about 12,000 feet) and a Chavez intimate, Evo
Morales, as president. Like Morales, Fuentes has rejected U.S.
anti-drug policy by calling for greater legalization of the coca bush,
whose leaves yield cocaine.
A lawyer by training and one of seven children of Quechua campesinos,
Fuentes gained prominence locally as a kind of Rush Limbaugh of the
angry left. His on-air perorations feature anti-U.S.tirades and
bouquets for Chavez and Morales.
Fuentes mobilized rural indigenous support to help secure his election
in 2006, winning with less than 20% of the vote against a divided
opposition. His exaltation of Chavez soon alarmed Lima and raised
eyebrows at the U.S. Embassy.
"Some authorities in Puno want to mortgage out Peru to a foreign
power," Prime Minister Jorge del Castillo told Peruvian radio in a
direct swipe at Fuentes.
But Fuentes denies receiving any petrodollars or formal aid from
Venezuela. Nor has any proof of such a link emerged. He calls himself a
patriotic Peruvian. Still, Fuentes says he is treated like a foreign
agent.
The regional and federal governments regularly exchange insults, and
Fuentes favors a "Bolivarian" alternative.
The governor visited Caracas last year to attend the annual conclave of
Chavez's regional union, the Bolivarian Alternative for the Peoples of
the Americas, known by its Spanish acronym, ALBA. The alliance, which
includes Venezuela, Bolivia, Nicaragua and Cuba, is Chavez's answer to
U.S.-backed regional free-trade blocs.
So-called ALBA houses proliferate in Peru's southern highlands, serving
as dissemination points for chavismo, Chavez's version of
socialism. Officials in Lima see Venezuelan penetration.
"The government intelligence apparatus is always watching us," said
Marcial Maydana Vilca, an architect who is head of the ALBA network in
Peru. He works from a downtown office here featuring the inevitable
posters of Chavez and Che Guevara.
The ALBA houses in Peru, Maydana said, receive no money from Venezuela
and get by on donations from members, mostly political and social
groups. Though openly pro-Chavez, they function largely as social
service facilitators, he said.
The network arranges for thousands of poor Peruvians to receive free
medical care from Cuban doctors working in Bolivia under Operation
Miracle, a Chavez health initiative. Cuban educators in Bolivia are
also training Peruvian volunteers for a related literacy campaign.
Although Fuentes embraces the ALBA initiative, he is persona non
grata among these pro-Chavez militants.
"He has his own self-interest at mind," Maydana said of Fuentes.
The governor may seem a seditious threat from Lima's perspective. At
home, however, many view him as incompetent and corrupt. Barely more
than a year in office, Fuentes has alienated former allies on the left
and now faces a recall election.
In a poll by the local newspaper, Los Andes, voters gave Fuentes a
disapproval rating of close to 70%, only slightly lower than the vote
of no confidence for President Garcia.
Critics here label Fuentes a demagogue who has embraced Chavez in a
cynical ploy to consolidate power.
From Fuentes' standpoint, his hometown opponents are sore losers, his
national foes imperialist hacks.
"All the government does is satanize me," Fuentes said. "It's the same
old caste that has always ruled. They should spend more time doing
something about reducing poverty here and less time worrying about me
and Hugo Chavez."
Copyright 2008 Los Angeles Times