Carlos Mesa

colspan="2" bgcolor=#FFF8DC align="center" | 220px
Carlos Mesa Gisbert

President of Bolivia

Tenure From October 17, 2003
Preceded by Gonzalo Snchez de Lozada
Succeeded by incumbent in office
Date of birth August 12 1953
Place of birth La Paz
First Lady Elvira Salinas de Mesa
Party no party affiliation
Carlos Diego Mesa Gisbert (born August 12, 1953) is the current President of Bolivia, holding the office since October 17, 2003. As vice president under the previous president, Gonzalo Snchez de Lozada, Mesa assumed the post when extensive protests and strikes shut down Bolivia in a bitter dispute known as the Bolivian Gas War, forcing Snchez de Lozada to resign and flee the country. Mesa had been vice president since August 6, 2002. As vice president, he was also the head of the Bolivian Congress. Before entering politics, Mesa was a historian and a journalist in radio, television and newspapers. He is a member of the Bolivian History Academy. Despite his lack of experience in the political arena, Mesa's star rose quickly in the Snchez de Lozada administration. In September 2003, he was invited to address the UN General Assembly, where he warned:
Democracy is in danger in Bolivia as the result of legitimate pressures from the poor. We cannot generate economic growth and well-being for a few and then expect that the large majorities that are excluded will watch silently and patiently. We poor countries demand that our products be admitted into the markets of rich countries in adequate conditions. http://www.tuscaloosanews.com/apps/pbcs.dll/article?AID=/20031017/API/310171127&cachetime=5
As the gas conflict escalated, Mesa became increasingly unhappy with the government's heavy-handed repression of the protests, which left an estimated 50 people dead. He withdrew his support for Snchez de Lozada several days before the latter's resignation, saying: "I cannot continue to support the situation we are living through." This may also have had personal reasons as it opened the way to Mesa succeeding Snchez de Lozada as president. Mesa thus adopted a "let things pass" attitude that sent him into the most powerful position in the country. Bolivia's next presidential elections were scheduled for 2007, but Mesa was quick to point out that his administration was transitional and that he did not intend to complete Snchez de Lozada's term in office. Eventually, he changed his mind and decided to try to see out his term. He also promised to hold a binding referendum on the gas export plan, which he did with uncertain results; the referendum posed vague and overly complicated questions. (See: Bolivian gas referendum, 2004.) In March 2004, Mesa announced that the government of Bolivia would hold a series of rallies around the country, and in Bolivian embassies overseas, demanding that Chile return to Bolivia a stretch of seacoast which Bolivia lost in 1884 after the end of the War of the Pacific. Chile has refused to negotiate on the issue, but Mesa has made this policy a central point of his administration. Following protests, he offered his resignation to Congress on March 7, 2005; however, the members of Congress voted almost unanimously the next day to reject his offer.

Works

  • Cine boliviano, del realizador al crtico (co-author, 1979)
  • El cine boliviano segn Luis Espinal (1982)
  • Presidentes de Bolivia: entre urnas y fusiles (1983)
  • Manual de historia de Bolivia (co-author, 1983)
  • La aventura del cine boliviano 1952-1985 (1985)
  • Un debate entre gitanos (1991)
  • De Cerca, una dcada de conversaciones en democracia (1993)
  • La epopeya del ftbol boliviano (1994)
  • Territorios de libertad (1995)
  • La espada en la palabra (2000)

External links

See also

Mesa, Carlos Mesa, Carlos Mesa, Carlos

 

<< PreviousWord BrowserNext >>
intertidal spider
emperor huan of han china
jack black (actor)
jim abbott (politician)
grammy awards of 1989
diane ablonczy
peter adams
online music store
dear world
emperor ling of han china
oregon health and science university
reg alcock
margaret trudeau
bullet (album)
carole marie allard
prince of hongnong
wycombe
early christian art and architecture
william petty
pollinator decline
zhang liang
emperor xian of han china
thunder child
adam's curse
dick clark
sorry
lapland bunting
bruce greenwood
set theoretic limit
whomping willow
cirl bunting
space program of the people's republic of china
the gap
aryl
levis
pine bunting
in the mouth of madness
big game
stanford band
morgoth's ring
the war of the jewels
king biscuit time
the peoples of middle earth
architectural history