• Most Popular
  • Most Shared
A martial arts enthusiast pulls a vehicle with a rope connected to his eye sockets during a performance in Hefei, Anhui province November 30, 2009. Picture taken November 30, 2009. REUTERS/China Daily

Pictures of the year: Oddly

A look at the year's best strange and unusual photos.   Slideshow 

    Llama fetus ritual to help Bolivia's Morales?

    EL ALTO, Bolivia
    Mon Aug 11, 2008 11:26am EDT
    Dried llama fetuses are seen for sale as offerings at the witches' market in El Alto, on the outskirts of La Paz, August 8, 2008. Dozens of witch doctors tend to a warren of stalls in Bolivian President Evo Morales' stronghold of El Alto, making offerings that promise luck at work or in love, or to call up spirits and banish curses. Clients have been making offerings in the hope that it will help Morales survive a recall vote this weekend. REUTERS/David Mercado (BOLIVIA)

    EL ALTO, Bolivia (Reuters) - Muttering incantations at a witches' market above La Paz, Faustino Tinta sets fire to a dried llama fetus and wax trinkets, an offering his client hopes will help Bolivian President Evo Morales survive a recall vote.

    Oddly Enough

    Tinta, 53, is one of dozens of witch doctors who tend a warren of stalls in the Morales' stronghold of El Alto, making offerings that promise luck at work or in love, or to call up spirits and banish curses.

    Inside his stall herbs hang on the wall next to a carving of Jesus and a picture of Morales. Outside, at around 13,120 feet above sea level, snow falls on the ground.

    "Snow. It is a happy omen," he said, sprinkling alcohol on the palms of 23-year-old miner Javier Ramos. "Many people have come to make offerings to Pachamama for Evo."

    August is the month of Pachamama, or Mother Earth, central to Andean culture.

    Ramos wants spirits to protect him while he works underground at a gold mine in the town of Consata, 85 miles

    north of La Paz, and to ensure that Morales wins Sunday's vote and pushes on with his nationalization and pro-poor reforms.

    "I'm making this offering so things go well at work, so that nothing happens to me inside the mine, so I make money, and so that Evo wins," he said, his smile revealing tiny gold stars set into his teeth as the smell of caramel wafted from the burning pyre. "I will vote for him. Let's hope he wins."

    POLITICAL CRISIS

    Morales is expected to survive a recall vote this weekend but South America's poorest country is gripped by a political crisis that could deepen as right-wing opponents seek to derail his socialist reforms.

    Morales and eight of Bolivia's nine provincial governors face Sunday's recall votes. Confident of victory, he approved the votes in an apparent bid to undermine his opponents and sap momentum from autonomy movements in natural gas-rich eastern provinces.

    The president is very popular in and around La Paz, but his reforms, from energy and mining nationalization to the centralization of energy revenues, have polarized Bolivians.

    "Evo is going to have the support of more people. He is going to win the referendum," said soothsayer Maria Samo, tossing coca leaves onto a crucifix placed on a piece of woven material in her own stall nearby.

    "But his enemies will try to make trouble. There, look: that is his luck," added Samo, pointing to two stray leaves, their dark green upper side facing upwards. She has told fortunes for 25 years and followed in her grandmother's footsteps.

    The dark side of the leaves denotes luck while the silvery underside is cause for worry, she said.

    And another question on many Bolivians' lips -- will 48-year-old Morales, Bolivia's first indigenous leader and a former coca farmer, get married?

    "No, I see no partner," she said. "He won't get married in the coming years."

    (Editing by Sandra Maler)



    More from Reuters

    A customer is served at a counter inside a foreign exchange store displaying a poster of various banknotes including the Chinese yuan or renminbi (RMB) in Hong Kong November 20, 2009. REUTERS/Bobby Yip
    OUTLOOK 2010:

    Be careful what you wish for

    Pressure on China to loosen its grip on the yuan will continue but the U.S. should tread carefully. Here are five world market issues to watch.  Full Article 

    Aurora, a 20-year-old Beluga whale, swims with her newborn calf after giving birth at the Vancouver Aquarium in Vancouver, British Columbia June 7, 2009. REUTERS/Andy Clark

    365 days for the doomed

    From polar bears to emperor penguins, endangered species will get top online billing in 2010 during the Year of Biodiversity.  Full Article