By contrast, historian Carlos Mesa, who founded Cinemateca Boliviana in 1976 and was its director until 1985, then served as President of Bolivia from 2003 to 2005, describes Corazón Aymara and Wara Wara as part of an "avant-garde intellectual and artistic movement" which promoted the role of indigenous Bolivians in the 1920s and 1930s.
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Celso Torrelio Villa (June 3, 1933, Chuquisaca, Bolivia - April 23, 1999, La Paz) was a military general, a member of the Junta of Commanders of the Armed Forces (1981), and de facto President of Bolivia between September 1981 and August 1982.
Luis Adolfo Siles Salinas (June 21, 1925, La Paz, Bolivia – October 19, 2005, La Paz) was the Constitutional President of Bolivia for a period of five months between April and September 1969.
Manfred Reyes Villa (born April 20, 1954) is a Bolivian politician, who was mayor of Cochabamba four times in a row and ran for the presidency in 2002 and 2009 against Gonzalo Sánchez de Lozada and Evo Morales Ayma.
The vote resulted from strains between the Prefecture of Santa Cruz and President Evo Morales.
Sebastián Ágreda (1795, Potosí, Bolivia – December 18, 1875, La Paz, Bolivia) served briefly as President of Bolivia, from June 10 to July 9, 1841.
José Ballivián (1805 – 1855), the 9th president of Bolivia from 1841 to 1847
Hugo Ballivián (1901 – 1995), the de facto president of Bolivia from 1951 to 1952
Adolfo Ballivián (1831 – 1874), the constitutional president of Bolivia from 1873 to 1874
The current President of Bolivia Evo Morales and the Bolivian UN Ambassador Pablo Solón Romero have demanded a democratisation of the UN on many occasions.
Enrique Hertzog (1896–1981), was president of Bolivia, 1947–1949
Jorge Córdova (1822–1862), military officer and constitutional President of Bolivia (1855–1857)
He then became Vice-President of the Bolivian portion of the Peru-Bolivian Confederation, again under Santa Cruz, who was both President of Bolivia and the Confederation's Supreme Protector in Lima.
Néstor Guillén Olmos (January 28, 1890 – 1966) was briefly President of Bolivia.
Juan Pereda (born 1931), former military general and de facto president of Bolivia (1978)
Antonio José de Sucre, (1795–1830), General, Grand Marshall of Ayacucho, President of Bolivia