Perfil (Sabado)

After tension, Cambiemos backs food emergency bill in lower house

Ruling coalition backs opposition bill in lower house, after tense week that saw clashes between police and protesters camping out on Avenida 9 de Julio.

- CONTINUED ON FRONT PAGE

Argentina’s economic crisis reached fever pitch this week, with poverty and protest coming to the fore. In violent scenes seen Wednesday, clashes between police and protesters camping out in front of the Social Developmen­t Ministry on Avenida 9 de Julio left a handful of people wounded. A day later, Congress took a huge step towards approving a “food emergency” law to tackle nutritiona­l insecurity.

On Thursday, lower house lawmakers offered a fig leaf to social movements and labour groups by unanimousl­y passing a draft “food emergency” law.

The legislatio­n would free up resources for social programmes amid a worsening economic landscape and, despite initially expressing its opposition, the government eventually moved to support the bill.

Hours before the bill went to the floor, Cambiemos lawmaker Daniel Lipovetzk y announced that his caucus had decided “as a block to accompany the Food Emergency project.”

“We are facing a problem of hunger, malnutriti­on and a sharp drop in income,” opposition Red x Argentina lawmaker Daniel Arroyo, a co-author of the bill, told the Chamber of Deputies as the legislatio­n was debated.

The bill, yet to be approved by the Senate, would provide a 50 percent increase in food assistance programmes to growing numbers of poor.

“We all have to help in a complicate­d context i n which there are many people who are having a hard time,” declared A r royo, a member of the Frente de Todos coalition of opposition leader A lberto Fernández, who is strongly favoured to win October’s presidenti­al election.

VIOLENT SCENES

Tensions spiked on Wednesday in scenes captured by photograph­ers and TV cameras, as clashes erupted between demonstrat­ors and police officers.

The protesters set up an encampment on Avenida 9 de Julio, a critical transport artery for the City on Wednesday, the second such demonstrat­ion in a week. Social movements have led a sustained disruption of daily life in the City to pressure the government to support the poorest members of society and declare a nutritiona­l emergency.

Police attempted to disperse the protest with tear gas and baton attacks, which didn’t halt activists from continuing their 48-hour encampment. Protesters claimed they were attacked by the security forces without provocatio­n.

“They beat me savagely along with other comrades,” said Eduardo Belliboni, leader of piquetero group Polo Obrero. “They’ve launched [tear] gas and batons against unarmed people who didn’t have their faces covered.”

Social organisati­ons and labour groups ultimately took to the streets after a “failed” meeting with Social Developmen­t Minister Carolina Stanley, who along with the government reportedly refused to concede to the demands of increased spending for welfare programmes and soup kitchens.

Yet despite that, the word from the Casa Rosada was more conciliato­ry. President Mauricio Macri – who has yet to explicitly endorse the legislatio­n before Congress – str uck a different tone on T hursday, adm it ting that many Argentine families “are finding it harder to make ends meet.”

“Where this situation strikes most clearly is at the table of Argentines, which is the most important thing for the family,” Macri said.

In a column released through the Télam state news agency, the president promised he would “continue taking the necessary decisions” to stabilise the economy.

INCREASES

Should the food emergency bill pass the Senate, increases in funding for social programmes would increase by between 8 and 10 billion pesos by 2022.

Amid references to Macri’s budget-slashing austerity measures, Consenso Federal deputy Graciela Camaño pleaded with fellow lawmakers not to preoccupy themselves “debating budgetary questions.”

“I don’t care about the electoral context,” Camaño told the Chamber of Deputies. “To have 45 percent of people in poverty and 11 percent in extreme poverty is a scandal.”

The Senate will consider the legislatio­n next Wednesday, yet Cambiemos lawmakers were already hinting Friday that the law will be approved in the upper house.

Esteban Bullrich, a Cambiemos senator for Buenos Aires Province, said Friday the government had supported the measure because it will not generate a “change in total [budgetary] goals” and that government accounts would remain balanced.

“There is agreement and the idea is to try to put on the table on Wednesday and put it for wa rd,” Bu l lr ich told CNN Radio. “I don’t see major difficulti­es from it passing the same as in the Chamber of Deputies.”

 ?? NA / DAMIAN DOPACIO ?? Demonstrat­ors and police officers in riot gear confront each other on Avenida 9 de Julio.
NA / DAMIAN DOPACIO Demonstrat­ors and police officers in riot gear confront each other on Avenida 9 de Julio.
 ?? NA/ DAMIAN DOPACIO ?? A demonstrat­or is helped by fellow protesters after having been hit by police officers on Av. 9 de Julio.
NA/ DAMIAN DOPACIO A demonstrat­or is helped by fellow protesters after having been hit by police officers on Av. 9 de Julio.

Newspapers in Spanish

Newspapers from Argentina