Coordinating Committee of Peasant Women of the Tropics of Cochabamba
Cochabamba, Bolivia
Bolivia is one of the poorest countries in South America, with nearly
30 percent of the population living on less than a dollar a day. In May 2005 a
new law imposing increased taxes on foreign companies investing in
Bolivia's gas reserves sparked mass protests across the country.
Indigenous and peasant groups assert that the law did not go far
enough to prevent the exploitation of Bolivia's natural resources by foreign companies. In 2005, tens of thousands of protesters descended on the capital, La Paz, calling for the nationalization of Bolivia's rich
natural gas resources, and demanding constitutional reforms that would
give greater rights and political power to Bolivia's impoverished
indigenous population, who represent the majority.
This movement led to the election of President Evo Morales and the nationalization of several refineries in 2006.
Leonida Zurita Vargas, an indigenous activist and president of the Coordinating Committee of Peasant Women of the Tropics of Cochabamba participated in the protests, seeking
improved conditions for indigenous women and their families living in
the Chapare region of Bolivia.
This region, inhabited primarily by
indigenous Quechua people, has been adversely affected by
militarization imposed by the "war on drugs," which propagates violence
in the community, including violence against women.
The
group's goal is to "augment our existing knowledge on the
critical problems that face the country so that we can be more
effective in political involvement to change laws and other
conditions."
Through leadership seminars and educational projects, the group
promotes the empowerment and political participation of women, and has initiated a dressmaking
income-generation program for local women.
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Main Issues:
Indigenous Women's Rights
Economic Independence
Political Participation
Violence Against Women
Grants Received:
2006 $24,000
2004 $15,000
2003 $7,000
To combat violence, poverty, discrimination and political
turmoil, the Cochabamba women are working to "keep alive the strongest hope," locally and nationally.
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