Perfil (Sabado)

What we learned this week

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THE WEEK IN CORONAVIRU­S

There were 2,054,681 confirmed cases of coronaviru­s and 51,000 deaths at press time yesterday as against last week’s figures breaking through the barriers of two million cases (2,008,345) and 50,000 deaths (50,029), in both cases on the previous Friday (February 12). Ash Wednesday saw a major milestone with the first mass return to classes after all schoolchil­dren nationwide lost all classroom education last year save for a few thousand in some inland rural schools in a couple of provinces – around 370,000 of the City’s 785,000 schoolchil­dren went back to school. Also on Wednesday Health Minister Ginés González García called for the eliminatio­n of the PASO primaries as an “unnecessar­y risk” despite expressing optimism about vaccinatio­n, while 520,000 doses of India’s Covishield vaccine (based on the Astrazenec­a-oxford offering) arrived in Argentina. The nation’s health minister was back in the news on Friday, however, when President Alberto Fernández asked for his resignatio­n after journalist Horacio Verbitsky revealed he had been able to skip the queue for a jab with a call to González García’s office.

MENEM PASSES AWAY

Senator Carlos Menem, the longestser­ving president in Argentine democratic history (a full decade between 1989 and 1999), died last Sunday at the age of 90 from complicati­ons stemming from a urinary infection.

COUNCIL OF MAGISTRATE­S

O nThursday Lomas de Zamora University chancellor Diego Molea, the academic representa­tive on the Council of Magistrate­s, was unanimousl­y picked to head the judicial watchdog with powers to designate and remove judges. Molea, whose political origins lie in Lower House Speaker Sergio Massa’s Renewal Front but who also has strong links with La Cámpora militant grouping, is a Frente de Todos supporter while the new vice-president (president until this week), judge Alberto Lugones, also leans that way. But opposition members will be chairing some key committees such as Discipline and Accusation

(the judge Ricardo Recondo) and Selection of Judges (deputy Graciela Camaño) with all posts being negotiated between all sectors over a period of weeks, thus making all of Thursday’s voting unanimous. Molea has pledged “continuity” with Lugones. At the close of the meeting Juntos por el Cambio deputy Pablo Tonelli raised the question of the recent pressures by ANSES social security administra­tion on over 200 judges and prosecutor­s to pension themselves off, calling the move “unconstitu­tional” and “grossly arbitrary” as well as violating the “acquired rights” of judges. This issue was passed to the Council’s Labour Committee for analysis. The meeting was attended by 12 of the 13 members with Senator Mariano Recalde (Frente de Todos-city) the only absentee after testing positive for coronaviru­s.

HOARDING PROBE

The government has accused a number of leading companies, including Mastellone, Fargo, AGD, Danone, Molinos Cañuelas, Bunge, Molinos Río de la Plata, Unilever, Procter & Gamble, Paladini and Potigian of holding back mass consumptio­n items and creating shortages, enjoining them to distribute products normally to supermarke­ts to meet demand. The government notes that its recent inspection­s of retail outlets have turned up more cases of products missing from shelves than price abuses violating controls. Some companies complained that the drastic methods of 2006-2013 Domestic Trade Secretary Guillermo Moreno were making a comeback.

MARKET WATCH

The parallel “blue” dollar continued its downward course of all this year last week, even if inching only one peso from last Friday to close at 148 pesos. The official exchange rate thus moved further ahead (if its 65 percent surcharges are added), going up from 94.10 to 94.40 pesos according to Banco Nación, or 152.95 pesos for savers with the surcharges. The unofficial but legal exchange rates fell below the “blue” dollar for the first time this month with the CCL down from 151.61 to 143.42 pesos since last Friday while the MEP dropped from 146.88 to 139.41 pesos. as against 150.90 pesos a week ago. Country risk moved up to 1,484 points from 1,462 points the previous Friday.

PETROL UP AGAIN

YPF increased petrol prices for the fourth time in six weeks last Monday, only 1.2 percent this time but a cumulative 11-12 percent for the year so far, well ahead of inflation. Increased fuel taxation and rising world oil prices alike mount price pressures on oil companies.

SOCIO-ECONOMIC COUNCIL LAUNCH

The Socio-economic Council for longrange planning, promised by President Alberto Fernández in his 2019 election campaign, was finally up and running yesterday after a 14-month delay, headed by Strategic Affairs Secretary Gustavo Beliz.

SANTIAGO DEL ESTERO FEMICIDE HOTSPOT

Carnival Tuesday saw the year’s bloodiest femicide in Santiago del Estero with two sisters falling victim when Rino Garnica, 43, stabbed both his estranged wife and his sister-in-law to death. Silvia and Silvana Rojas were both still alive when local police arrested Garnica amid pools of blood but died on the way to hospital. What drove Garnica to this double murder was his wife setting up a divorce hearing in the city of Añatuta. The news came in the same week anti-gender-violence activists held a protest outside Congress (pictured), decrying recent femicides.

PJ PARTY VOTE

Last Wednesday the deadline expired for filing lists to run in the March 21 elections to pick new Justiciali­st (Peronist) Party authoritie­s. President Alberto Fernández heading the official Unidad y Federalism­o list as its nominee for party chairman faces a single challenge from San Luis Governor Alberto Rodríguez Saá heading a list named 17 de octubre Fuerza Argentina. President Fernández is accompanie­d further down the list by no less than nine Peronist governors (including Buenos Aires Province Governor Axel Kicillof as one of his five running-mates) as well as Cabinet Chief Santiago Cafiero, two ministers, Anses social security administra­tion director Fernanda Raverta and numerous trade unionists. Several of the names in Rodríguez Saá’s list are in the dock on corruption and other charges – its credential­s have been challenged but not for that reason. Assuming he emerges victorious next month, President Fernández will replace former San Juan governor José Luis Gioja as Justiciali­st Party chairman.

LONG WEEKEND

The Carnival long weekend running until Ash Wednesday was a success, the Tourism and Sports Ministry reported, with domestic tourism of over three million people. The five provinces of Buenos Aires, Córdoba, Entre Ríos, Río Negro and Neuquén drew over three-quarters of this total. Most of the 10 most popular destinatio­ns were on the Atlantic coast with Córdoba and San Martín de los Andes the only exceptions while the 20 most successful had 100 percent hotel occupancy (the biggest resort of Mar del Plata 70 percent). The Ministry estimates domestic tourism over the entire summer vacations at over 11 million nationwide despite the coronaviru­s pandemic, thus helping regional economies.

FACUNDO CASTRO

Atourmalin­e semi-precious stone found on Thursday in Teniente Origone police station in southern Buenos Aires Province could prove a direct link between the Buenos Aires provincial police and the death last year of Facundo Astudillo Castro since the youth wore such a stone around his neck. A hair found in a patrol car is also being subjected to DNA testing to see if it belonged to Astudillo Castro.

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