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WSWS : News
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& Central America : Argentina
General strike in Argentina
By Gerardo Nebbia
28 November 2000
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A 36-hour general strike called by three union federations
in Argentina virtually shut down the nation of 37 million inhabitants
last week. The mass walkout was a protest against austerity measures
by the De la Rua administration that would cut Social Security
benefits and freeze federal and provincial budgets for five years.
President De la Rua and Labor Minister Patricia Bullrich denounced
the strike.
Last Friday, Argentina's industrial sector was totally paralyzed
by the strike. Hundreds of women took to the streets banging their
pots and government employees occupied the offices of the privatized
Social Security system and blocked main roads in Buenos Aires.
There were also incidents of right-wing violence. In Chaco province,
a 23-year old unemployed worker was shot and killed on the picket
line and another worker was wounded.
The strike was largely a response by the Peronist labor bureaucracy,
which has endorsed the government's austerity measures, to the
growing movement of the unemployed that for months has been blocking
roads and organizing protests. The union officials called the
strike in an effort to diffuse explosive social tensions. The
few labor rallies that were called by the unions during the strike
were largely boycotted by workers.
The strike followed a violent confrontation on November 22
in the industrial city of Cordoba. Police violently assaulted
a labor rally in Argentina's second largest city after workers
responded with sticks and stones to police efforts to dislodge
them from the city hall. Six workers and six police officers were
wounded after Cordoba Mayor German Kammerath ordered police to
end the rally, which was called in preparation for the following
day's general strike.
News of the clash was spread by radio and spontaneous marches
of workers began to take place toward the center of town. At the
same time, workers took over the Urgent Care Hospital. Groups
of arriving workers surrounded and stoned police, who responded
with rubber bullets and tear gas. The clashes continued from morning
to afternoon. Kammerath's order was defended by Cordoba's governor,
Jose Manuel De la Sota, a member of the Peronist opposition party,
who said, Unions are here to defend the workers, not to
replace governments.
De la Rua's economic program is aimed at winning approval from
the International Monetary Fund for a standby loan of $20 billion
to prevent Argentina from defaulting on next year's debt.
See Also:
Argentine debt crisis threatens global
turbulence
[21 November 2000]
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