National protests rock

Peru as President Alan Garcia navigates through an increasingly tumultuous labor and teacher uprising. Rejections of a free trade agreement with the

US and neoliberal economic policies are at the heart of the national uprising which has left three people dead and several wounded. National protests rock

Peru as President Alan Garcia navigates through an increasingly tumultuous labor and teacher uprising. Rejections of a free trade agreement with the

US and neoliberal economic policies are at the heart of the national uprising which has left three people dead and several wounded.

Protests have stemmed from an increasing gap between the rich minority and the poor majority in the country. Most of

Peru‘s population of over 27 million survives on less than a dollar a day. “What we have in

Peru is economic growth without social development,” a political analyst, Ernesto Velit, told Reuters.

President Garcia, who in his election campaign promised he had learned from his disastrous mistakes in a previous presidency, is now experiencing a sharp decline in approval ratings. Miners, farmers, construction workers and teachers in

Peru are demanding better wages and revisions to the country’s free trade agreement with the

US. The international Manco Cápac airport in

Juliaca, Peru was occupied by 5,000 workers who set fire to furniture and office equipment in the facility. Members of the Unified Trade Union of Education Workers of Peru (SUTEP) protested the passage of an educational reform law which teachers contend will privatize education and put hundreds of teachers out of work. Protesters are also demanding an assembly be organized to rewrite the country’s constitution so that Peruvians can “effectively recover their rights.”

A train carrying tourists to

Machu Picchu was pelted with stones thrown by local protesting campesinos. Police officers and one governor were taken hostage by strikers and transportation in many provinces has been at a standstill for days. The teacher strikes closed down 70 percent of the country’s schools, while other protesters blockaded roads and occupied government buildings.

Protesters in southern Peru held nine policemen hostage for six hours. Protest leaders wanted to exchange the hostages for 14 demonstrators who had been arrested. Meanwhile, 1,000 people blockading a major highway demanded the government invest in the region and expressed solidarity with the national teachers’ strike. Ollanta Humala, a left wing candidate in the last elections against Garcia, has joined the strikers in hopes to rekindle a future bid for the presidency.

Panama and Bush’s Push for Allies in the

Americas

On July 11th,

Panama‘s National Assembly approved a free trade agreement with the

US by a margin of 58 to 3. Proponents of the move say the agreement will help

Panama grow as an exporter of goods to the

US. Farmers and unions denounced the Assembly’s decision, explaining that Panamanian producers can’t compete with those in the

US. Enrique Athanasiadis of the National Agriculture Organization said “This accord is a disaster for products and it benefits the oligarchy.” Hundreds of activists convened outside government offices to protest.

Analysts see the recent push for

US trade agreements with

Peru,

Colombia,

Panama and

South Korea as a growing part of US President Bush’s current agenda. One senior official in the Bush administration said, “The pro-trade community sees these four agreements as a united set and believe it’s important to pass them all. The ongoing effort is continuing to build and will ratchet up efforts toward building bipartisan majorities this fall.”

The National Journal writes that “[Bush] administration officials are careful not to mention

Venezuela or left-wing president Hugo Chavez, but they are clearly concerned about his moves toward nationalizing industries and his use of charisma and oil money to spread his message in the region.”

 

Benjamin Dangl is the author of The Price of Fire: Resource Wars and Social Movements in Bolivia, (AK Press, March 2007).

 


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Ben studied writing and literature at Bard College and Latin American history and literature at the Universidad Nacional de Cuyo in Mendoza, Argentina. He is the author of the book The Price of Fire: Resource Wars and Social Movements in Bolivia (AK Press, 2007), which has been published in Spanish by Plural Editores in Bolivia and in Tamil by The New Century Publishing House in Tamil Nadu, India. Dangl is also a contributor to Taking Sides: Clashing Views on Latin American Issues (McGraw-Hill, 2006). Dangl has worked as a journalist covering politics and social issues in Latin America for over six years, writing for publications such as The Guardian Unlimited, The Nation Magazine, The Progressive, Utne Reader, CounterPunch, Alternet, Common Dreams, Z Magazine, La Estrella de Panama and dozens of other media outlets. He has received two Project Censored Awards from Sonoma University for his investigative reports on US government and military intervention in Latin America. Dangl has been interviewed on a variety of news programs including the BBC and Democracy Now!.Dangl teaches Latin American history and politics and globalization at Burlington College in Vermont. He is the founder and editor of Upside Down World, a publication on politics and social movements in Latin America, and works as the editor of Toward Freedom, a progressive perspective on world events.He has been a participant in various anti-war and anti-globalization movements in the US and elsewhere in the Americas. Dangl is also a member of the Burlington, VT Homebrewer's Co-op. writing at www.bendangl.net

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