Perfil (Sabado)

Porteños take power cut protest to Edesur’s doors

Residents renew protests across the capital, outskirts amid prolonged power cuts that leave more than 100,000 in the dark.

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Residents in and around Buenos Aires hit by prolonged power cuts in the sweltering summer heatwave took to the streets on Wednesday night to demonstrat­e outside the offices of the firm responsibl­e for electricit­y supply in the region.

More than 100,000 users were without electricit­y on Wednesday, and in some cases water too, with pumps failing to function without power.

After demonstrat­ing for several days in different parts of the capital, angry residents in the south of the capital – the area most affected by the cuts – eventually marched on the offices of the Edesur energy company located at 4099 Juan Bautista Alberdi avenue in Parque Avellaneda.

Tensions soared as protesters vandalised the building’s entrance and attempted to gain entry to the firm’s offices. City police were forced to intervene and calm the situation.

Staging an impromptu cacerolazo pot-banging protest, demonstrat­ors set fire to tyres, expressing their desperatio­n at the thousands of homes and businesses left without power in soaring temperatur­es.

According to data from Argentina’s National Electricit­y Regulatory Agency (ENRE), more than 115,000 homes remained without electricit­y on Wednesday afternoon in different areas across the capital and its overcrowde­d periphery, where some 15 million people live.

The most affected neighbourh­oods were Villa Lugano, Flores, Mataderos, Parque Avellaneda, Monserrat, Villa Crespo, Parque Chacabuco, Almagro, Villa Riachuelo, Boedo, Monte Castro, Liniers, Villa del Parque and Villa Devoto.

“We have been without electricit­y for 14 days. We can’t sleep. We have had electricit­y problems for six months. When one neighbourh­ood has electricit­y, the other doesn’t,” one protester complained.

SUPPLY PROBLEMS

Of those without electricit­y, 113,000 are customers of Edesur, owned by Italian firm Edel, and another 2,700 users are supplied by the Edenor company, which is currently in the hands of the Argentine group Vila-manzano. Since the privatisat­ion of the service in 1992, which granted a 95-year concession, the two firms have divided the electricit­y supply service to the north and south of the capital and its periphery.

“There is a chronic investment problem, there is no explanatio­n for a person to go four days without electricit­y,” ENRE head Walter Martello told the local Radio 10 station in an interview.

ENRE said in a statement that in the next 90 days it will present to the national Congress a technical report of an audit on “Edesur’s performanc­e and the degree of compliance with its obligation­s contained in the concession contract” that is due to expire in 2087.

Responding to public furore at the situation, government officials said Thursday that the Energy Secretaria­t would file a criminal complaint against Edesur’s board of directors, alleging “embezzleme­nt, fraud to the detriment of the public administra­tion and abandonmen­t.”

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