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Violent clashes in Buenos Aires on eve of election
Argentine police attack workers protest
By Bill Vann
23 April 2003
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Just days before Argentinas presidential election, Buenos
Aires was rocked by violence Monday as heavily armed police attacked
a demonstration led by women textile workers. The workers were
attempting to reclaim their jobs at a factory they had occupied
and run since December 2001. More than 125 people were arrested
and scores more injured by police, who, in addition to tear gas
and rubber bullets, fired live ammunition at the workers.
What amounted to a police riot raged across nearly 30 blocks
of the Argentine capital well into the night as the cops pursued
the demonstrators. At one point, the police invaded a childrens
hospital where some of the injured protesters had sought refuge,
firing tear gas canisters that sickened both patients and medical
staff.
The confrontation had been building since the early morning
hours last Friday, when police violently evicted the textile workers
from the Brukman factory. It was the third attempt to carry out
the eviction since workers took over the plant 16 months ago.
This time, over 200 riot police entered the building, expelling
the workers.
The cops were sent to enforce a court order issued following
a ruling by two appeals judges, both judicial veterans of the
military dictatorship that ruled Argentina from 1976 to 1983.
The ruling was issued to return the factory to the owners who
had closed it and prevent the workers from trying to resume production.
It included the chilling phrase: There is no supremacy of
life or physical integrity over economic interests. For
the police, this amounted to a license to kill.
On Monday, following two days of rallies and picketing, the
workers marched on the plant at the head of a mass protest of
7,000 supporters. Over 500 police wearing riot gear and backed
by armored cars were waiting for them, having ringed the factory
with barricades.
Police commanders on the scene refused to negotiate with the
leaders of the demonstration, insisting they would enforce the
court order and prevent anyone from entering the factory. At about
5:30 p.m., demonstrators toppled one of the barricades, and four
women, Brukman workers dressed in their light-blue work smocks,
ran toward the factory door.
This seemingly harmless gesture triggered a massive assault
by the police, who filled the streets with choking tear gas and
fired on the crowd. While the authorities claimed that the cops
were using rubber bullets, demonstrators later showed reporters
spent cartridges from lethal ammunition.
The four workers who managed to breech the barricade were the
first targets of the attack, but were defended by media cameramen
who were inside the police lines and shielded them until they
could escape.
The thousands of demonstrators fled the scene, but fought running
battles with the police, throwing rocks and, in a few cases, Molotov
cocktails. A few blocks from the factory, a crowd of demonstrators
encountered a car with two plainclothes police in it. After forcing
the occupants to flee, they torched the vehicle.
Police continued to chase down fleeing demonstrators many blocks
from the factory site. In a number of cases, protesters were thrown
to the ground, beaten and kicked before being hauled away.
Among those arrested were four workers from the occupied Zanon
ceramics factory, who had come from the province of Neuquén
to support the Brukman workers. Also rounded up were politicians
and journalists who had joined the march, including Marcelo Parrili,
the vice-presidential candidate of the Izquierda Unida coalition,
and Miguel Bonasso, who writes for the left-wing daily Pagina
12.
Some of the workers and their supporters regrouped at the Argentine
Congress building, which they attempted to enter in order to hold
a press conference. Police barred them, even though the group
included some legislators.
Outside the building the workers spoke to the media. They
are afraid of us because we demonstrated that if we can run the
factory, we can run the country, Celia Martinez, one of
the leaders of the Brukman occupation, told the press. We
put our bodies, our lives on the line, and for that we have to
return; we are not going to give up the factory.
While several government officials later issued public statements
lamenting the violent repression, all of them insisted that they
were powerless to intervene in the face of the courts ruling.
The Brukman workers occupied the plant after its owners shut
it down when they were unable to pay salaries and meet debt payments
in the midst of Argentinas economic free-fall. It is one
of over 100 closed factories and other businesses that have been
similarly reopened by their workforces across Argentina, where
the official unemployment rate now stands at over 20 percent.
The explosion of police violence at Brukman came in the midst
of the final round of campaigning in presidential elections set
for April 27. There were widespread suspicions in Argentina that
the police action may have part of a deliberate campaign of destabilization
involving security forces and political elements bent on bringing
to power a right-wing government committed to suppressing popular
unrest.
None of the candidates in Sundays election are expected
to receive anywhere near a majority of the vote from an electorate
that is deeply skeptical, if not openly hostile, toward all those
running for president. Among those projected as front-runners
is ex-president Carlos Menem, whose policies of sweeping privatizations
and dollar-to-peso convertibility are widely blamed for the economic
catastrophe that has beset the country. Nearly 60 percent of the
populationdouble the number of barely a year agonow
live below the poverty line, attempting to survive on incomes
of under $250 a month.
Menem has pledged to rule with an iron hand, proposing
to use the armed forces to police the streets. Presenting himself
as the only figure capable of rescuing Argentina from social chaos,
he and his supporters have been accused of fomenting street violence
and looting in an attempt to boost his political fortunes.
The countrys last elected president, Fernando de la Rua,
was extracted from the presidential palace by helicopter amidst
the mass upheavals that accompanied the countrys financial
crisis. The office was then held by four individuals selected
by the national legislature in the space of two weeks, the last
being Argentinas present caretaker president, Eduardo Duhalde.
Besides Menem, another four candidates are considered possible
contenders for a spot in a two-candidate runoff scheduled for
May 18. These include two Peronists: Santa Cruz provincial Governor
Néstor Kirchner, who is backed by Duhalde; and San Luis
provincial Governor Adolfo Rodríguez Saá, who was
president for a week during the 2001 crisis.
There are also two former members of the Radical Party of de
la Rua: Elisa Carrió, a member of the House of Deputies
from Chaco who formed a party called Alternative for a Republic
of Equals; and Ricardo López Murphy, a University of Chicago-trained
economist, who was forced to resign as de la Ruas economy
minister after failing to push through a drastic austerity program.
Argentine voters are required by law to go to the polls, but
in the October 2001 midterm elections nearly 40 percent cast spoiled
or blank ballots. Popular hostility toward the entire political
establishment has not diminished, and some political analysts
are predicting a similar protest vote on Sunday.
See Also:
Child starvation stalks Argentinas
northern provinces
[22 February 2003]
Argentine workers stage
hunger march
[6 December 2002]
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