Latin America
Related: About this forumIndigenous Bolivian women take up taekwondo against gender-based violence
Indigenous Bolivian women take up taekwondo against gender-based violence
Bolivia has one of the highest rates of gender violence, with 80 percent women experiencing it in their lifetime.
?resize=1170%2C780&quality=80
Many dressed in traditional Aymara bulging skirt with woollen blanket and tall bowler hat over two long braids, the women start each session with a muscle warm-up. [Aizar Raldes/AFP]
Published On 6 Mar 20246 Mar 2024
A violent attack by would-be robbers steered Bolivian Lidia Mayta towards the martial art of taekwondo. Three years later, she helps train other Indigenous women to defend themselves against rampant gender-based violence in the South American country. Mayta says she would have died if neighbours had not come out of their homes to scare off the assailants choking her outside her front door as they tried to steal her wallet. After the attack, she pledged she would never feel so helpless again. She joined a woman-only class at the Warmi Power taekwondo studio in Bolivias second city El Alto. Warmi means woman in the indigenous Quechua language. Her enthusiasm was such that the founders soon asked her to join the training team, helping in particular to translate instructions into Aymara, another of Bolivias indigenous tongues. I didnt know how to defend myself, now I try to help other women lose that fear, the 56-year-old shopkeeper and community health secretary said. This is a job of violence prevention.
Government data shows that eight out of 10 women and girls in Bolivia suffer physical violence at least once in their lives. This is a violent country for women, said Lucia Vargas of Coordinadora de la Mujer, or Womens Coordinator, a rights advocacy group. In 2023, more than 51,000 women reported falling victim to violence. Husbands or partners were the perpetrators in the vast majority of cases.
Warmi Power was launched by Laura Roca and Kimberly Nosa both taekwondo black belts in 2015. Violence is not solved with violence, but learning to defend ourselves can save our lives, said Nosa, who has been practising the martial art for 18 years. Roca is a trained psychologist who said she took up the discipline despite her father insisting it was the preserve of men. Together, the pair have trained more than 35,000 women countrywide. At the class in El Alto, most of the women are Indigenous and engaged in informal trade.
?fit=1170%2C778&quality=80
Lidia Mayta, taekwondo instructor, works at her business in El Alto. [Aizar Raldes/AFP]
?fit=1170%2C800&quality=80
Most women have never dealt a blow in their lives and seem uncertain with their first air punches. [Aizar Raldes/AFP]
?fit=1170%2C780&quality=80
But they soon get into the routine. They kick, they scream, and they learn to identify an assailant's weak spots. [Aizar Raldes/AFP]
?fit=1170%2C767&quality=80
Women's rights groups in Bolivia say gender-based violence is normalised in a society where many men see women as property. [Aizar Raldes/AFP]
?fit=1170%2C780&quality=80
Since 2013, Bolivia has had a specific law to protect women from gender-based violence. It prescribed a 30-year prison term for the crime of "femicide" - when a woman is killed for being a woman. [Aizar Raldes/AFP]
?fit=1170%2C780&quality=80
But since the law entered into force, 1,085 femicides have been reported, and critics say not enough resources are dedicated to fighting gender-based crime in Bolivia. [Aizar Raldes/AFP]
?fit=1170%2C829&quality=80
An Aymara Indigenous woman practises with taekwondo instructors Laura Roca (C) and Kimberly Nosa (R) during the personal self-defence and therapy workshop called Warmi Power to prevent sexist violence in El Alto. [Aizar Raldes/AFP]
?fit=1170%2C780&quality=80
Taekwondo instructor Lidia Mayta gives a lecture before the self-defence and therapy workshop. [Aizar Raldes/AFP]
?fit=1170%2C780&quality=80
At the end of their class in El Alto, the taekwondo pupils walk one by one through a tunnel formed by two rows of women holding hands. "You're beautiful, you're powerful, you're valuable, you're a warrior, you're strong," they are told, and slapped on the back encouragingly. The class ends with a group hug. [Aizar Raldes/AFP]
https://www.aljazeera.com/gallery/2024/3/6/indigenous-bolivian-women-take-up-taekwondo-against-gender-based-violence
Judi Lynn
(162,344 posts)in the form of young men who are carrying clubs wrapped with barbed wire which they use to attack indigenous people when they get the chance. They also pile into trucks occasionally and drive into their neighborhoods where they lay waste to as much as they can get by with each time.
Don't forget the ongoing femicide which has been terrorizing the lives of indigenous women from the tip of Chile, throughout the Americas, all the way to Alaska. There is that! Very, very few people are ever arrested for these atrocities.
Branco Marinkovic, whose fascist parents moved to Bolivia right after WWII, is a mega-powerful wealthy political man in Santa Cruz who organized this "Youth Union" group which works like Hitler's Youth group, and terrorizes relentlessly the native population.
Please take time to scan his Wikipedia, you'll see he is without a doubt beloved by the US right-wing's worst monsters:
Branko Marinković
Branko Goran Marinković Jovičević[1] (born 21 August 1967) is a Bolivian electrochemical engineer, economist, businessman, and politician who served as the Minister of Development Planning and Minister of Economy and Public Finance during the interim presidency of Jeanine Áñez.
Biography
Branko Goran Marinković Jovičević was born on 21 August 1967 in Santa Cruz, Bolivia. He is the son of a Croatian[2][3][4][5][6] father and Montenegrin[6] mother emigrated to Bolivia from Yugoslavia in 1954. Marinković also holds Croatian passport.[7]
He studied electromechanical engineering and economics and finance at the University of Texas in the United States. Marinković is important in the Oilseeds Industry in Bolivia since 2000 and is president of the Federation of Private Entrepreneurs since 2004 and vice chairman of Banco Económico.
He was elected President of the Santa Cruz Civic Committee in 2007.[8]
Marinković was an opponent of President Evo Morales.[9]
In the documentary, Who is Branko Marinković , which aired on Bolivian national television, Marinković was depicted as pro-Ustae, although his father reportedly was as a member of the Partisans.[10] In that same documentary, Marinković is shown as a citizen of Croatia.[7]
In December 2010, Bolivia's prosecutor had filed charges against 39 people, including Marinković, for 2009 alleged plot aimed at killing Evo Morales and starting an armed rebellion. Marinković, and other leading opposition leaders argued that in no way were they are associated with the plot. Marinković was forced into exile in Brazil while fearing for his life. He claimed his innocence and has said the following: "The Bolivian government pursues me and forced me to live outside my beloved Bolivia, because in Bolivia my life would be threatened. I have no guarantees that I would be allowed a fair trial."[3]
More:
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Branko_Marinkovi%C4%87
https://www.lostiempos.com/sites/default/fi:hes/styles/noticia_detalle/public/media_imagen/2009/12/10/85892_0.jpg
The congenitally criminally insane fascists and total racists in the Americas have always been protected, advanced, supported financially, materially, politically, militarily by their allies in the US right-wing, from the very FIRST.
Thank you, niyad.
Judi Lynn
(162,344 posts)Driving their little terror buggy which the fascist "Youth union" hopes will scare the daylights out of actual human beings.
A local dumb #### encourages a younger piece of #### to pound a native woman into a paste. Their hatred is endless.
OldBaldy1701E
(6,267 posts)Those sticks are not going to help them once you start running them over. Of course, that would make one a target I suppose, but it seems all indigenous are already targets, so one can either take it or do something about it.
niyad
(119,632 posts)these horrors to light. The level of hatred for women, for the Indigenous, is almost beyond comprehension.
Would you consider cross-posting these in Women's Rights And Issues for added visibility? Thanks in advance.