 For more videos on people's struggles, please subscribe to our YouTube channel. Hello and welcome to Around the World in 8 Minutes, a show by People's Dispatch which brings you stories of resistance and struggles against capitalist exploitation and state repression. We first bring you breaking news from Bolivia, with security forces massacred at least five protesters demonstrating against the right-wing coup in the country. In the second segment, we go to India, bringing you voices from the fee-must-fall movement in Jawaharlal Nehru University and the International Windows Day march in New Delhi. Finally, we take a look at the custodial killing of an aboriginal teenager in Australia. Bolivian security forces killed as many as five protesters on November 15 in Sakaba, Cochabamba and gravely injured hundreds. The indigenous and peasant protesters who hail from Koka Farmer federations were attempting to march from the small city of Sakaba to the department's capital Cochabamba when they were met with a military and police cordon. As the peaceful march attempted to advance, soldiers and police officers fired at the protesters with tear gas canisters and life bullets. The protesters intended to march to the city of Cochabamba and to reach the country's capital La Paz on Sunday in order to join the thousands of Bolivians mobilizing against the civic military coup carried out against President Evo Morales and Vice President Alvaro Garcia-Linera. On November 12, right-wing Senator Jeanine Anez declared herself interim president of Bolivia in a session without quorum which would theoretically render the declaration illegitimate. Shortly after she was decorated with a tricolor sash by military officials, she thrust up a massive bible and proclaimed, the bible has returned to the palace. She was accompanied by right-wing leader Fernando Camacho who was one of the driving leaders of the pro-coup mobilizations. Now we go to India. Students from New Delhi based Jawaharlal Nehru University are continuing their protest against the massive hostile fee hike and curfew timings. On Tuesday, the university administration partially rolled back the fee hike after the executive committee meeting. The students in teachers union called this a hogwash and an attempt to fool the students as major demands remained unanswered. We spoke to JNUS representative Saqeet Moon to know about the partial rollback and what it actually means. This is a clear indication of the pressure that we managed to build upon the JATI ministry and the JNU administration. However, this is not what we wanted. This is a compromise. We are not fighting this movement for the last month to reach a compromise. We are fighting it so that our demands are completely accepted by the JNU administration. So, there is no question of going back. And why that is, I will just explain to you in a couple of simple reasons. First of all, Twitter is no substitution for dialogue. Dialogue cannot be replaced by tweeting on an important issue like this. So, the vice president should first of all come and meet us and talk to us regarding what is happening in JNU and why it is happening and what can be done. Second of all, the draft of the manual has certain provisions. The first provision is that the power to do a C-hike has been transferred from the IFC meeting where two world representatives, whether it be from JNUSU or the hospital just, it has been taken from their ambit into the ambit of the vice chancellor and his extraordinary powers. Now, there is not a single person in the university who will trust the vice chancellor to not increase the C-hike once we take our movement back. On Thursday, November 14, rallying beneath the red flag of the Centre for Indian Trade Unions, street vendors in the capital city of New Delhi, organised under the street hawkers union of Delhi, marched through the parliament's street commemorating International Street vendors day. The primary demand of street vendors is implementation of legal protections according to them by law, which would grant them security from extortion and eviction by police and municipal authorities. They also spoke out against foreign direct investment in the retail sector. A 2015 study by the Centre for Civil Society, based on eight markets in Delhi, comprising of 8,150 street vendors, found that a hawker loses an average of around Rs. 1,766,000, which was then equal to around $2,650 every year. This amounted to almost 30% of the annual income, lost to paying bribes, penalties, everyday with charges, and costs incurred due to goods damaged during evictions. Let's hear from people who joined the protest. Apart from that, all other ready patris in different streets are being allowed because they provide cheap goods to the common people, because they provide cheap goods to the working class of this country, and which is a requirement. Secondly, they have also said that they are the kind of unemployment which is there in the country if some people are doing some self-jobs or self-created works that needs to be protected. So that was some substance of the Supreme Court judgment. On the basis of that judgment only, the High Court also gave a similar kind of judgment with slightly stronger in its tone on encroachment, because there are some problems in encroachment also in Delhi, especially in some areas where there is congestion in the population and traffic, and especially around the schools. So that is there. But apart from that, Delhi High Court also allowed ready patri wallas to have their radies in different localities. Both the orders are being misused by Delhi police, by the central government under their dictates and by MCD to remove all the ready patri wallas from Delhi, and that is what has happened and what is happening. As far as we know, at least in 40 places, ready patri is being replaced. In Ring Road, inside the Ring Road, almost all the ready patri places are being dislocated or they are displaced, and there is a continuous attack on them. There is a kind of haptavasuli and all kinds of things happening. This is a sheer exploitation which needs to be opposed. So that is what we are trying to argue that through unionization, we should oppose this kind of move of Delhi police. Next, we go to Australia, where last week, protest demonstrations and rallies took place all across the country in response to the custodial killing of Kumanjai Walker. Walker was a 19-year-old Aboriginal man from the Walpere tribe. He was shot on November 9th in his home in Yundumu, a small town in Northern Territory with a population of less than 800 people. Protests took place in major cities including Sydney and Melbourne and also in the parliament lawns in Canberra. Other places where demonstrations took place include Darwin, Perth, Brisbane, Adelaide, etc. Following these nationwide protests, Zach Rolf, the police officer responsible, was charged with murder. However, he was later released on bail with full pay following and out of session court hearing. Walker is the second Aboriginal person to die after being shot by police in the last two months adding to a long list of incidents of custodial deaths of Indigenous people in Australia. Deborah Green, a Yamaji woman, wrote that there has been a long history of our people being afraid of the police because historically, the organisation was conceived to keep First Nations people away from colonisers in many cases by shooting and killing them. Today, the same continues to occur, though under the guise of maintaining law and order. And this is all we have for this episode of Around the World in 8 Minutes. For more such stories and videos, visit our website peoplesdispatch.org. Follow us on YouTube, Twitter, Facebook and Instagram.