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Protests over unpaid wages in Argentina
By Margaret Rees
4 August 1999
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Violence erupted in the capital of the northern Argentinian
province of Corrientes on July 28, when paramilitary police attacked
300 protesters at the General Belgrano bridge using tear gas and
rubber bullets. Over the last two months, protests have continued
in response to the financial crisis which has left the provincial
government bankrupt, the wages of all state public servants four
months in arrears, schools closed and the provincial Congress
in turmoil.
The bridge, between Corrientes city and the nearby town of
Resistencia, had been blocked for over 24 hours, by a demonstration
demanding arrears payments and the resumption of social works.
Crowds of public servants included the wives of some policemen,
who were among those in a calamitous financial situation. The
traffic jam at the bridge stretched for at least two kilometres.
On the orders of Corrientes Federal Judge Augusto Costaguta,
the police moved on the demonstration about lunchtime, putting
out fires where protesters were cooking food. When the paramilitary
troops threw tear gas, demonstrators responded by pelting them
with rocks. At least 10 demonstrators were injured, including
Juan Alberto Pereyra who was seriously wounded in the face by
a rubber bullet. A group of specialist surgeons later reconstructed
part of his face. Five paramilitary officers as well as a fire
brigade corporal were also injured.
Some provincial deputies arrived at the scene and tried to
persuade the demonstrators to withdraw, but to no avail. The politicians
promised to hold a meeting next week, to which the protesters
replied: "Hold the meeting now, not tomorrow."
Police formed a human chain to stop the protesters until the
provincial Justice Minister Jorge Perez Rueda arrived and tried
to defuse the standoff. The demonstrators agreed to stop advancing
if the paramilitary police withdrew. The latter only agreed to
a staggered withdrawal, so that it would not seem as if the determined
crowd had prevailed.
On the same day, about 300 public servants attacked the FM
Sudamerica radio station with stones, as well as the mansion of
radio commentator Natalio Aides, for supporting former Corrientes
mayor Raul "Tato" Romero Feris. When speakers denounced
Aides as a "mercenary of the air," his bodyguards responded
with a volley of bullets from his house. The front of the radio
station was virtually destroyed.
Around 200 teachers arrived in a bus convoy in the Plaza de
Mayo after a day-long journey, to demonstrate against the provincial
government's continued refusal to pay their wages. Around 250
federal police were positioned around the plaza to prevent them
setting up a tent there.
Almost simultaneously with the attacks on demonstrators, the
national government did an about face on its previous refusals
to provide aid and agreed to bail out the bankrupt province in
order to try and control the situation. Argentinian Interior Minister
Carlos Corach met for seven hours with Correntino provincial leaders
and private and public bankers in Buenos Aires. He announced a
175 million peso package, with 55 million immediately, enabling
a month's wages to be paid to state public servants almost straight
away, as well as the second half of a bonus due since 1998. Three
months wages remain in arrears.
To receive the credit the provincial government of Corrientes
will be required to carry out an extensive program of cuts and
privatisations, including the sale of the provincial bank and
the provincial energy company. It is estimated the province has
a debt of 1,400 million pesos [1 peso = $US1].
In some parts of the province there have been no school classes
for three months and virtually all financial transactions had
broken down. The president of the San Jose Association Hospital
said that health workers had no access to essential food, gas
or credit. A woman doctor at the hospital led a fight for donations
from the public as the hospital was unable to continue except
for emergencies.
In Goya, the head of the municipality said that the chain of
payments had been completely cut. The banks closed commercial
accounts and many municipal employees only survived because some
shops gave food on credit.
The provincial bankruptcy is a sharp expression of the economic
crisis of Argentina overall. Argentina has been the single largest
borrower of funds from the World Bank this year, with loans totalling
$3.23 billion, outstripping countries such as Indonesia, South
Korea and Brazil. Argentina's debt target has had to be renegotiated
with the International Monetary Fund (IMF) three times already
in 1999.
This year the Menem government has cut public spending by more
than $700 million. Now government officials are gearing up for
more spending cuts, admitting that the economic prospects are
worse this time. There are nearly two million unemployed, and
a World Bank report in June admitted that 13.4 million Argentinians
were living in poverty in 1998. Almost 30 percent of Argentina's
workforce are on contracts as short as three to 12 months. A decade
ago, such temporary work was almost unknown.
The instability of the embattled province of Corrientes has
also intensified the crisis of political rule there. The central
government of Carlos Menem has been dealing with provincial leaders
who experience a very rapid turnover. Six weeks ago Menem met
with Corrientes governor Pedro Braillard Poccard in tandem with
Corrientes mayor Raul "Tato" Romero Feris. Not only
have both been deposed and face corruption accusations, but Poccard's
replacement Victor Hugo Maidana has also been deposed as governor
and replaced by Hugo Ruben Perie.
On arriving in Buenos Aires this week Governor Perie blamed
the province's disastrous finances on the previous administration,
and also announced that Raul Romero Feris would be arrested within
days after an audit of the municipal finances. Another member
of the negotiating team, Corrientes national senator Jose Antonio
Romero Feris, the estranged brother of Raul, told reporters that
the province was in an "unsustainable" situation and
must have urgent funds. He also blamed Braillard Poccard's administration,
saying it "left the province like scorched earth with a debt
of 1.4 billion pesos."
See Also:
Argentine economy in free fall
[23 July 1999]
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