Chaco Boliviano department (proposed in 2006), Bolivia (original) (raw)


This page is part of © FOTW Flags Of The World website

Last modified: 2017-11-25 by antónio martins
Keywords: coffee | [chaco boliviano](keywordc.html#chaco boliviano) | guarani |
Links: FOTW homepage |search | disclaimer and copyright | write us | mirrors


[]

[[flag]](../images/b/bo-x.gif)
image by Ivan Sache, 20 Apr 2006


See also:

External links

[][]


Description of the flag

The flag is horizontally divided rojo, verde y café (red, green and coffee). Red stands for the blood shed by the Guaranis, green stands for the natural resources and coffee for the land. (The department anthem celebrates Apiaguaiqui Tumpa.)
Ivan Sache, 20 Apr 2006

[][]


Presentation

The most advanced claim is for the creation of the tenth department of Bolivia as the department of Chaco Boliviano. The new department (125 755 km²) would be made of the five provinces (in Bolivia, departments are divided into provinces):

The local administration was less enthusiastic than the APG. Whereas the APG wants its proposal to be discussed in the Constituent Assembly, Willy Salguero, President of the Civic Committee of Monteagudo (Comité Cívico de Monteagudo), says that the Committe has to meet first. During the ceremony, the APG hoisted the putative flag of the new department as a way of presenting the department to the country. Salguero considers the flag hoisting more as a symbolic act proving the unity of the Chaco territory.

Lawyer Ricardo Zárate, one of the promoters of the ceremony, said: «The aspiration to the Chaco inhabitants to create their own department is legitimate since we have been historically abandoned.» The Department Council of Santa Cruz stated that the territory of the department was indivisible, being an homogeneous geographical and historical area. Councillor Freddy Landívar accused the Bolivian government to be behind the affair, in order to dismember the most opposing region (there is a strong secessionist movement in Santa Cruz, where most of the oil resources are located). The President of the Civic Committee of Tarija, Francisco Navajas, said he was worried by the projects aimed at dividing the country.

Sources:

Ivan Sache, 20 Apr 2006

It covers about half the area of three current departments, including two of the smallest and the largest, Santa Cruz.
António Martins, 21 Apr 2006

[]


Anything below this line was not added by the editor of this page.