From: Barry Stoller <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
<[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
Sent: Saturday, December 29, 2001 8:22 AM
Subject: Class struggle in Argentina resumes [
 HTTP://WWW.STOPNATO.ORG.UK
 ---------------------------
 
 
 Reuters (with additional material by AP and BBC). 29 December 2001.

 Argentines Loot Congress in Protest Over Recession.
 
 BUENOS AIRES -- Argentine demonstrators clashed with police outside the
 presidential palace and broke down the doors of Congress on Saturday in
 anger at the new government's handling of a deep recession barely a week
 after protests forced out a previous president.
 
 At least two police were injured as they used tear gas to break up what
 had been a peaceful demonstration in which thousands of people took to
 the streets to protest interim President Adolfo Rodriguez Saa's decision
 to keep unpopular banking curbs and his appointment of some officials
 widely seen as corrupt.
 
 Some protesters pounded on the doors of the presidential palace, while
 others forced their way into Congress, dragged out furniture and set
 small fires that were quickly put out as general frustration over a
 four-year recession boiled over.
 
 "Get out! Get out!" they shouted toward the Government House.
 
 Carlos Grosso, chief advisor to the Cabinet but suspected of corruption
 during a stint last decade as mayor of Buenos Aires, resigned after
 Argentina's decaying middle class flooded the streets of the city to
 demand his departure.
 
 "We want to send a message to the politicians that we won't tolerate any
 more corruption," said Juan Carlos Alonso, 73, before the melee broke
 out. "And these banking restrictions are completely unacceptable!"
 
 About a dozen protesters hung from the metal bars shielding the
 presidential palace doors, while others sprayed graffiti on its walls
 before police in riot gear broke up the crowd, some of which then broke
 windows at downtown banks and shops before apparently returning home.
 
"These gangsters have got to go!" yelled one woman on television as she
 and thousands of others jumped up and down and beat pots and pans, a
 symbolic way to express anger in Argentina as the recession impoverishes
 thousands.
 
 Television images showed a crowd of protesters push one police officer
 to the ground and  repeatedly kick him, but the unrest appeared to be
 much less violent than the riots and looting that killed 27 people last
 week and led Fernando de la Rua to resign as president on Dec. 20.
 
 State news agency Telam said two policemen had been injured during the
 protests.
 
 Teenagers continued to throw stones at police once the crowd dispersed.
 
 A very short honeymoon appeared to be over for Rodriguez Saa, who
 suspended payments on part of Argentina's $132 billion debt after being
 appointed by Congress on Sunday to serve until new elections in March.
 
 Argentina's third president this year has drawn fire for his proposal
 for a new floating currency he hopes will kick-start consumer spending
 but that some fear could quickly become worthless.
 
 Some protesters also voiced anger over the Supreme Court's decision on
 Friday to uphold curbs on cash withdrawals from banks, which De la Rua's
 government implemented earlier this month to stop a run on the
 beleaguered financial system.
 
 The unpopular restrictions limiting Argentines to $1,000 in cash per
 month from their bank accounts have further suffocated consumer spending
 and led some to fear their life savings may be seized outright by the
 cash-strapped government.
 
 "I put my money in the bank for them to look after it, not to be
 stolen," read one protester's sign.
 
 A bank and a McDonalds restaurant were also ransacked, and one of the
 main railway stations was attacked.
 
 Fire fighters arriving at the scene were pelted with stones and rubbish
 bins.
 
 At least 10 police officers were injured, local television said,
 including one officer who was beaten bloody by a mob before he could be
 led away from the pitched street battles outside the Government House.
 
 Police declined to provide details on the number of injured, but they
 said 33 people were arrested during the unrest.
 
 The BBC's Daniel Schweimler, in Buenos Aires, says the patience of many
 Argentines with their political leaders has now worn very thin.
 
 "It is just too much," said one protester.
 
 "All the politicians are as corrupt as each other and all we can do is
 take to the streets to protest."
  . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .
 
 Barry Stoller
 http://groups.yahoo.com/group/ProletarianNews


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