Perfil (Sabado)

Stories that caught our eye

-

BUDGET CLEARS DEPUTIES

The 2023 budget was approved by the lower house in the small hours of Wednesday by a comfortabl­e majority of 180 of the 257 deputies with 22 voting against while 49 abstained. Dozens of new articles were tagged onto the original budget, which now goes to the Senate for final approval, many of them favouring trade union interests such as the teamsters and the union-run healthcare schemes. But two of the most controvers­ial additions – applying income taxation throughout the judicial branch and allowing the government to up export duties – were rejected.

ANOTHER SCHOOL SIT-IN

Last Monday students occupied the Colegio Nacional de Buenos Aires, calling for the resignatio­n of headmistre­ss Valeria Bergman. They complained about deficienci­es in the ancient building, including a fan collapsing on the head of a student last October, and flawed management of the coronaviru­s pandemic. Bergman was also accused of handpickin­g teachers rather than selecting them for their skills on a competitiv­e basis. On the same day City Hall confirmed that it would be pressing charges against 366 parents of schoolchil­dren for instigatin­g the occupation of over 15 public schools last month, suing them for over 50 million pesos. One of those parents, Andrea Prado, accused City Hall of illegal espionage.

MACRI DRAWS FAITHFUL

Ex-president Mauricio Macri presented his second book Para Qué to some 1,500 of the party faithful at the Rural Society exhibition grounds last Monday. Taking constant swipes at the government, Macri affirmed: “We are the change or we are nothing.” The ex-president glossed over his own candidacy next year and, on the contrary, promoted electoral competitio­n within the Juntos por el Cambio opposition coalition as an example towards a competitiv­e society. Macri’s presentati­on included not only an account of his presidency but also his school days in Colegio Cardinal Newman, his brief business career, his 1991 kidnapping and his presidency of Boca Juniors, insisting that it was the tragedy of the 2004 Cromañón disco blaze which pushed him into politics (even though he ran for City mayor in 2003). The event was

Jorge the turtle (Caretta Caretta sea turtle) swims in a tank at the former Aquarium of Mendoza. Rescued from a beach in 1984 and in captivity for 40 years, he is moving to an aqarium in Mar del Plata ahead of a potential return to his natural environmen­t.

attended by City Mayor Horacio Rodríguez Larreta, PRO chair Patricia Bullrich, his 2019 running-mate Miguel Ángel Pichetto and virtually all his ex-ministers, among others, but the Radical presence was minimal (deputies Mario Negri and Rodrigo de Laredo).

CHINESE GREETINGS

President Alberto Fernández last Monday congratula­ted Xi Jinping on his re-election to a further five years at the Chinese Communist Party helm: “Under the leadership of Xi, China has achieved notable advances in the eradicatio­n of poverty, scientific and technologi­cal innovation and the fight against the Covid-19 pandemic, which has enormously improved the living standards of the Chinese people as an example for countries worldwide.”

RELIEF FOR DESTITUTE

Over half a million people have qualified for the Refuerzo Alimentari­o (food booster) of 45,000 pesos for vulnerable adults lacking any income, pension or state assistance of any kind and will be picking up the first half as from November 14, Anses social security administra­tion announced on Tuesday. Over 400 Anses offices nationwide set to work registerin­g some 514,000 people last week.

CFK BLASTS HEALTH HIKE

Vice-president Cristina Fernández Kirchner on Wednesday criticised the government for authorisin­g a 13.8 percent December increase for prepaid health schemes, calling it “frankly unacceptab­le.” Neither the double-digit monthly increase nor the triple-digit annual increase (114 percent or over 20 percent more than her own estímate of 2022 inflation) were justified, the ex-president insisted, echoing recent Kirchnerit­e voices calling for the redistribu­tion of wealth and the recovery of the purchasing-power of wages.

TEAMSTERS SETTLE

The teamsters finally settled for a 107 percent pay hike and a bonus of 100,000 pesos on Thursday afternoon after their leader Hugo Moyano prefaced wage talks at the Labour Ministry on Wednesday afternoon with the threat of an all-out strike as from Monday if his union was not granted its demand of a 131 percent wage increase. Up until that point employers had been offering 84 percent.

CRISTINA & THE COURTS

Federal judge Julián Ercolini on Monday acquitted both Vice-president Cristina Fernández de Kirchner and former Federal Planning Minister Julio De Vido in an offshoot of the Cuadernos (copybooks) case, removing the charges from the main trial. The highly specific accusation consisted of alleged illegal payments made by the heavy engineerin­g firm Pescarmona at Feir’s Park Hotel on May 29, 2008 and April 28, 2010. But not all the defendants escaped these charges – two former Federal Planning Ministry officials, including Roberto Baratta, and three businessme­n were sent to trial by prosecutor Carlos Stornelli.

STIUSO WANTS TO SPEAK

Former intelligen­ce ace Antonio Horacio ‘Jaime’ Stiuso on Wednesday requested a resumption of his testimony in the case investigat­ing the 2015 death of special AMIA prosecutor Alberto Nisman via a two-paragraph writ signed by himself and his lawyer Santiago Blanco Bermúdez. Stiuso last testified in the case 43 months ago but claimed that since then he had been tipped off as to relevant new leads by press leaks. The decision whether or not to accept the new testimony offered now depends on Prosecutor Eduardo Taiano. Since 2018 the courts have defined the death of Nisman as murder on the basis of Border Guard forensic work which has since come into question.

MASSA MEETS SENATORS FROM UNITED STATES

Economy Minister Sergio Massa hosted a bipartisan group of four United States senators at his Tigre home on Wednesday to discuss the exchange of tax informatio­n and energy issues. The group was headed by high-profile Senator Robert Menendez (Democrat-new Jersey) and accompanie­d by US Ambassador Marc Stanley. Argentine savings stashed away in the United States have been estimated to be as much as US$100 billion.

OFFICIAL DEPARTS

Communicat­ion and Press Undersecre­tary Marcelo Martín, who survived the departure of his boss Public Communicat­ion secretary Juan Pablo Biondi over a year ago in the wake of the midterm defeat, resigned on Monday. His exit was viewed as a gain for presidenti­al spokespers­on Gabriela Cerruti.

BOCA CHAMPS

Boca Juniors clinched the First Division championsh­ip last Sunday with the invaluable assistance of their eternal rivals River Plate, who downed Racing, the only other team still in contention, with a 2-1 away win. Despite home advantage with over 50,000 fans cheering them on, Boca were held to a 2-2 draw by Independie­nte while Racing were ahead with little over 10 minutes left in their match thanks to a 56th minute penalty converted by Matías Rojas but two late goals by Colombian Miguel Borja gave the victory to Marcelo Gallardo’s team in his last match as River trainer although it needed a dramatic lastminute penalty save by Franco Armani to confirm the result. Boca’s 35th league title was exuberantl­y celebrated around the Obelisk later that evening.

 ?? ANDRES LARROVERE / AFP ??
ANDRES LARROVERE / AFP

Newspapers in Spanish

Newspapers from Argentina