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Widespread public sector strikes in Corrientes, Argentina
By Perla Astudillo and Margaret Rees
29 June 1999
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Widespread strikes and demonstrations of teachers, tutors,
parents, health workers, pensioners and police erupted earlier
this month in the northern Argentinian province of Corrientes,
creating a sharp governmental crisis. Public sector workers have
not been paid for over two months or received their December salary
bonus, as the provincial government is bankrupt. Provision of
social services has also been suspended.
Thousands of teachers and supporters blockaded traffic in the
provincial capital for five hours on June 9. Trade union and church
leaders addressed the demonstrations, and demonstrators called
out People of Corrientes take a stand for your rights!
Others chanted, If this isn't the people, where are the
people? The Corrientes government dismissed the finance
minister and health minister on the same day but hostility to
the ruling Partido Nuevo (New Party) continued to widen.
Demonstrators have staked out the provincial assembly in an
aguante (vigil) that has now lasted over two weeks. Monica
Espriu, principal of Juan Pajol Normal School told La Nacion
newspaper: We have told the legislators that we are watching
them, and each time we are greeted with parliamentary antics,
but we will not be distracted."
Other workers supported the teachers' strike, with public transport
workers and prison guards taking industrial action on June 18
and joining the aguante. In the interior of the province,
a truck drivers' blockade cut off a major arterial route, as the
drivers protested against onerous state charges. On June 21-22,
different groups of professional workers from the private sector
took to the streets in the capital for the first time. They had
not received their salaries and demanded an urgent solution to
the financial crisis.
Hundreds of protest tents now dot the square in front of the
Congress building. The national government of Carlos Menem responded
to the aguante by dispatching 400 paramilitary police to
protect Correntino politicians, who were virtually forced to run
the gauntlet to get inside. The paramilitary forces surround the
legislaturethey are even deployed on the roofand the
plaza, armed with guns and water cannon. Earlier Menem said the
national government could take direct control of the province
"if necessary".
Menem's government at first gave the cash-strapped Corrientes
government short shrift financially. Interior Minister Carlos
Corach stated that the Corrientes province has received
the last peso that it is entitled to and the nation
owes nothing, absolutely nothing to Corrientes". However,
on June 18, Provincial Governor Pedro Braillard Poccard and Corrientes
Mayor Raul Romero Feris met with Menem to plead for emergency
financial support. As a result, Menem ordered his Finance Minister
to dispatch six million pesos to prop up the Corrientes government.
This money will not cover all the back wages and pensions, much
less meet future paymentsand meanwhile the social crisis
is worsening.
The aguante continues while the Corrientes Senate has
suspended Poccard after finding he has to answer charges of mismanagement
of government funds and incompetence. A caretaker governor, Victor
Maidana, formerly the vice-governor, was appointed on June 21
because Poccard would not resign. There could be 20-60 days of
further parliamentary machinations to oust Poccard.
Maidana has already outlined his economic plans for the province.
In one interview he said: I will not hesitate to slash public
spending. He also stated his perspective for the running
of the Corrientes government: Ministers of parliament are
secretaries, and the first priority for them is that the governor
exerts his mandate, giving the instructions to his ministersand
they must strictly follow only those orders.
The Corrientes government is desperately trying to obtain international
financing, with three schemes to sell 30-year bonds, but with
little success. The province, with a population of one million,
has a government debt of $1.4 billion. It is a primary goods-producing
economy, which suffered badly when floods destroyed the key rice
crop in 1998. The financial crisis in Corrientes underlines the
economic situation in Argentina itself, which is rapidly worsening.
The national economy is in recessionit has contracted
by 3 percent in the first financial quarter this year, and the
decline is expected to deepen to over 5 percent in the second
quarter. Argentinian exports fell 13 percent in the first four
months of 1999 and exports to the Mercosur bloc, including Brazil,
fell by 27 percent. The Menem government is trying to impose strict
budgetary deficit targets agreed with the IMF to obtain $2.8 billion
of loans, and another $7 billion in contingent lines of credit.
The Argentinian economy is expected to contract overall by between
2 to 4 percent in 1999, and unemployment is increasing, with next
month's unemployment figures expected to reach 15 percent.
Argentina's last recession, in 1995 after the Mexican peso
crisis, saw riots in several poorer provinces when local governments
refused to pay wages to public servants. Undoubtedly, this is
a factor in the Menem government's prompt dispatch of the paramilitary
police to Corrientes, as well as the about-face on its previous
refusal to provide financial assistance to the beleaguered Correntino
government.
See Also:
Menem invites US to "dollarize"
Argentina
[10 February 1999]
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