Sunday, February 03, 2008

Newsletter From Kosovo

The Democracy Center On-Line

Volume 79 - February 3, 2008

NEWSLETTER FROM KOSOVO


Dear Readers:

I am in the middle of a two-week work visit to the Balkans, asked here by two agencies of the United Nations to provide advocacy training to the local members of their staff dealing with children's rights and environmental issues. Over the course of the next few weeks this region of the world will reclaim global headlines again, as Kosovo declares its official independence from Serbia, amidst denunciations from Serbia, Russia and others. Here is an offering from what will, sometime in the next few weeks, become the world's newest nation.

Jim Shultz
The Democracy Center




NEWSLETTER FROM KOSOVO

Kosovo, The Balkans

I had to take a detour this morning on the snowy mountain road through the Balkan mountains that leads from Kosovo to Montenegro. The UN driver that escorted me to the border explained that the problem wasn't road conditions, but political ones.

The direct route between the two Balkan enclaves cuts through a small corner of Serbia, the nation from which Kosovo intends to declare its independence in the next few weeks. Because the flight that brought me here a week ago landed directly in Kosovo – no stop in Belgrade, no Serbian stamp in my blue passport – Serbian policy says that I arrived in the country illegally. Making border crossings a hassle is just one part of the pressure leaders in Belgrade seeks to bring on what they consider a runaway province.

This is Kosovo ten years down the road from a war with still open wounds, and weeks before it declares itself the world's newest nation. It is a country waiting to be a country, a place where 17,000 NATO troops still patrol the streets in giant green personnel carriers, and where Serbia to the north still considers it not only a part of that country but its ancient homeland.

"It will happen at anytime," people here tell me, maybe weeks, maybe months, but independence, they assure me, will happen.

"They sell every kind of firework here you can imagine," another UN employee tells me. "Independence Day, when it comes, will be very, very loud. There will also be gunfire, he warns. The guns will not be aimed at people, but up in the sky, in celebration. He lives on the top floor of his building and worries about some of those celebration bullets raining down onto his roof – or his living room floor.

Ten years after the war, and the NATO bombing that helped end it, the motivations for Kosovo independence are still easy to see here. On the road over the mountains there are still shattered skeletons of brick houses destroyed by Serbian mortar fire. There are also shattered Christian Orthodox churches destroyed in retaliation, by members of Kosovo's Muslim majority.

"First a Serbian neighbor of mine came to my apartment and warned me to leave," another of my new acquaintances remembered. "He said, 'Soon others will come and they will not speak so nicely as I am.' Then others came, shooting guns into the air in the street and ordering us to leave Kosovo. So we left." By the tens of thousands Albanian-speaking Kosovars fled, most of them to Macedonia. The fortunate ones took up residence with relatives. Many others ended up in UN refugee camps.

It is not surprising that the UN, NATO, and the US are considered heroes by many here who fled. They recite by heart the exact number of days that NATO dropped bombs on Belgrade and other targets to end the Kosovo expulsions – seventy-two. As we drove the mountain road this morning the UN driver recounted how he traveled the opposite direction a decade ago, home from Macedonia, "in a NATO motorcade." He waited three months more to bring his family home, wanting to be sure that a fragile peace would hold.

Today in Serbia, voters go to the polls in national elections, picking between two candidates dubbed by the foreign press as "moderate and Europe-leaning" on one side, and "radical nationalist and Russia-leaning" on the other. On Kosovo, however, their position is the same – it must remain a part of Serbia. The imminent declaration of independence is regarded in Serbia akin to how Governor Arnold Schwarzenegger declaring California a sovereign nation might be received in Washington. But 17,000 NATO troops, including a large US military base, seems to assure that hot rhetoric and border crossing hassles are likely as far as Serbia will go.

The challenges ahead for the 2 million people who inhabit this nation-to-be are rooted much more in economics than in political aggression (though there is concern about whether large numbers of Serbs in the nation's north will leave). Kosovo, when it declares independence, will not only be the world's newest nation, it will also be among the youngest. Half its people are under 25-years-old and adult unemployment soars near 40%.

"Right now what we mainly produce is trash," another Kosovar told me. The roads are littered with plastic bags and gutted automobile carcasses. Organized crime is rampant and growing here. Idleness, especially among the young, is worrisome. And everything, everything is essentially dictated by foreigners. The UN is the official government here. The International Monetary Fund, so notorious for its economic dictates tied to aid, wields orders here even before it has provided a dime.

Kosovo, like South Africa, Bolivia, Eastern Europe and other corners of the world in the last two decades, is headed down the exhilarating path of transforming its national identity. And as in those other places, popular expectations are high, unrealistically high, about what rebirth will bring.

It is only after the echoes of the fireworks fade and after the bullets shot into the sky (hopefully) roll off of rooftops that the not-so-romantic work of nation building will begin.

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Please consider making a donation to support The Democracy Center’s work. Checks can be mailed to the US address below, or donations can be made by credit card here.

THE DEMOCRACY CENTER ON-LINE is an electronic publication of The Democracy Center, distributed on an occasional basis to more than 4,500 organizations, policy makers, journalists and others, throughout the U.S. and worldwide. Please consider forwarding it along to those who might be interested. People can request to be added to the distribution list by sending an e-mail note to: contact@democracyctr.org. Newspapers and periodicals interested in reprinting or excerpting material in the newsletter should contact The Democracy Center at contact@democracyctr.org. Suggestions and comments are welcome. Past issues are available on The Democracy Center Web site.

THE DEMOCRACY CENTER

SAN FRANCISCO: P.O. Box 22157 San Francisco, CA 94122
BOLIVIA: Casilla 5283, Cochabamba, Bolivia
TEL: (415) 564-4767
FAX: (978) 383-1269
WEB: http://www.democracyctr.org
E-MAIL: contact@democracyctr.org

Friday, February 01, 2008

THE NEW ISSUE OF THE DEMOCRACY CENTER’S ANNUAL MAGAZINE

The Democracy Center On-Line
Volume 78 - January 24, 2008

THE NEW ISSUE OF THE DEMOCRACY CENTER’S ANNUAL MAGAZINE

Dear Readers:

Happy New Year to one and all! I hope that each one of you has had a great start to 2008. Here at The Democracy Center we begin 2008 by publishing the second annual issue of our magazine, Jallalla! (an indigenous word here in Bolivia for Live!). The full issue – dedicated to ‘citizen power’ around the world – is freshly posted on our Web site and I hope that you will take a look here.

Below is an introduction to the magazine and a summary of what you’ll find. Happy reading and thank you, as always, for your interest and support!

Jim Shultz
The Democracy Center


The New Democracy Center Magazine: The Power of Citizens

In the United States, 2008 promises to be ‘the year of the politician.’ Candidates for the Presidency alone will spend more than $1 billion this year trying to convince voters to go their way. That's enough money to take every person in Bolivia out to lunch every day for four months, or to finance the War in Iraq for 36 hours.

Yet, with so much focus on politicians and what they do, it is easy forget that what really makes a difference, from California to Cochabamba, is what citizens do. From peacemaking to battling global warming, it is citizens, not politicians, who are taking the lead.

This issue of Jallalla is dedicated to the power of citizens, the ability of each of us to make a difference. As before, a main focus of this magazine is Bolivia. In this issue we look at the current state of things in this country we call home, including political battles, environmental struggles, what 'feminism' means here, and some updates on issues that have put Bolivia in the global news.

But just as The Democracy Center's work reaches out globally, so this second issue of our annual magazine goes global too. We spotlight some of the work we have been doing with citizen groups around the world – from Uganda to the Balkans. We also spotlight an important new Democracy Center campaign, Voices from Latin America, which aims to bring a very different perspective into that big election-fest scheduled up north in 2008.

Here’s a look at what you’ll find in the new issue of Jallalla, at this link (and also information on how to order the glorious print version).

FOCUS ON BOLIVIA

2007: A Nation at a Difficult Crossroads

The year 2007 in Bolivia showed us just how difficult a road it is when a country begins to move in a new political direction. The first year of President Evo Morales was marked by big beginnings that symbolized hope and long-sought change. In Morales' second year in office, however, deep fault lines – divisions drawn by ethnicity, ideology, politics, socioeconomic differences, and regional interests– kept the country in constant conflict.

The Struggle for a New Constitution

The demand for a new Constitution finds its seeds among the nation’s indigenous majority. From the start, Bolivia's Constituent Assembly saw its task as looking far beyond traditional constitutional issues of how government should be organized. The Assembly declared that it had a mandate to make dramatic changes on an array of issues, including indigenous rights, autonomy, and land reform.

Focus on the Environment

The Chacaltaya glacier is a thick layer of ice that stretches across the rugged scalp of a mountain that rises more than 17,000 feet above sea level. The glacier dates back tens of thousands of years to the last ice age. For as long as people have lived in Bolivia's capital, La Paz, Chacaltaya glacier has been a source of water and life. But if geologists are right, by 2015 the last of the glacier will melt into a final drop of water and disappear. This is what global climate change, set in motion by energy use a hemisphere away, means for Bolivia's highlands and its people.

La Q’owa: A Taste of Bolivian Culture

Walking through the streets of Cochabamba on the first Friday of any month, one is struck by a pungent aroma wafting through the air and trails of smoke sneaking out the doors of small stores. This is the scent of the Bolivian ritual of the Q’owa (koh-wah), and a reminder of one of the ways in which many Bolivians still hold fast to ancient traditions.

Feminism from the Ground Up

Machismo is a phenomenon that runs deep in many cultures around the world, including in Bolivia. Feminism, however, is another powerful current that has its place in Bolivia’s history, one whose story is rarely told and often misunderstood.

Bolivia In Brief: An Update On Issues in The News

Coca: Bolivia Tries a New Approach: With a cocalero leader in the nation’s Presidency, Bolivia has taken a different approach to the green leaf that is simultaneously an ancient part of the nation’s culture, and also the base ingredient for cocaine.

A Former President Faces New Legal Challenges: Former Bolivian President Gonzalo Sánchez de Lozada was ousted by popular protests in October 2003 and living in self-imposed exile in suburban Maryland, now faces serious legal assaults on two fronts – one criminal and one civil.

ACTIVISM GONE GLOBAL


Road Trips: A Look at The Democracy Center’s Work Around the World

In Uganda, community organizers gather under a sprawling mango tree, plotting strategy as they monitor how the local government spends public funds. In the new Balkan republic of Montenegro, environmental advocates working with the United Nations debate the best way to protect a river from devastating development. In Santa Fe, New Mexico, a workshop brings together environmental activists, Pueblo tribal leaders and others to compare notes on how to wage effective lobbying campaigns in their state legislature. These are a few of the places and people that have been a part of The Democracy Center’s work recently, providing advocacy training and support to communities all over the world.

Seeds of Change: Social Entrepreneurs Across the Globe

Usually, the word “entrepreneur” conjures up the idea of a person who sees a demand in the economic marketplace. In that demand, the marketplace entrepreneur finds opportunity for profit and assembles the resources, capital, and market know how to take the risk of making that vision real. Not all demands, however, can be met by the marketplace. Not all opportunities are defined as a return on investment.

Voices from Latin America: Bringing Perspectives from Abroad into the U.S. Elections

The U.S. War in Iraq teaches us again that U.S. foreign policy is not something that we can leave solely in the hands of our politicians. Citizens have to take a strong and direct interest in what our nation does abroad, which includes understanding what people in other countries have to say about the impact of our policies on them. Voices from Latin America is an effort by The Democracy Center and our friends both north and south to bring Latin American perspectives directly into the U.S. election debate in 2008.

The Peacemaker: An American Woman's Journey With the Iraqi People

Cathy Breen served as a Maryknoll lay missionary in Bolivia for a decade. Later, in the run-up to the U.S. invasion of Iraq, Cathy traveled to Baghdad to bear witness and report what she saw back home. She was on the ground and under the bombs during "Shock and Awe" and for the toppling of Saddam and the chaos and violence that followed. She now works with the huge community of more than 700,000 Iraqi refugees. These are her words from an interview in November 2007 from Amman, Jordan.

Beyond Violence

Last May Democracy Center staff member Leny Olivera traveled to Vermont to gather with 80 people from more than 20 countries for a global meeting on nonviolence. For three weeks they lived together, and shared their experiences of violence and ways to work beyond it.

Read any or all of these articles by visiting the on-line version of the magazine here.

Also: Please consider making a donation to support The Democracy Center’s work. Checks can be mailed to the US address below, or donations can be made by credit card here.
________________________________________________________________

THE DEMOCRACY CENTER ON-LINE is an electronic publication of The Democracy Center, distributed on an occasional basis to more than 4,500 organizations, policy makers, journalists and others, throughout the U.S. and worldwide. Please consider forwarding it along to those who might be interested. People can request to be added to the distribution list by sending an e-mail note to: contact@democracyctr.org. Newspapers and periodicals interested in reprinting or excerpting material in the newsletter should contact The Democracy Center at contact@democracyctr.org. Suggestions and comments are welcome. Past issues are available on The Democracy Center Web site.

THE DEMOCRACY CENTER

SAN FRANCISCO: P.O. Box 22157 San Francisco, CA 94122
BOLIVIA: Casilla 5283, Cochabamba, Bolivia
TEL: (415) 564-4767
FAX: (978) 383-1269
WEB: http://www.democracyctr.org
E-MAIL: contact@democracyctr.org