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<DIV><FONT face=Arial size=2><FONT face="Times New Roman" size=3>A report from
Argentina:<BR>For a deeper background analysis on class struggle in Argentina I
recommend the article "Before and After the March Crisis<BR>Between the workers'
uprising and the crisis of the bourgeois rule<BR>Four general strikes in fifteen
months" from the theoretical magazine of the Trotskyist Faction in<BR></FONT><A
href="http://www.pts.org.ar/ft/estrategia/ei17/ei17englishargentina2.htm"><FONT
face="Times New Roman"
size=3>http://www.pts.org.ar/ft/estrategia/ei17/ei17englishargentina2.htm</FONT></A><FONT
face="Times New Roman" size=3> <BR>Also read articles in English on Argentina
from La Verdad Obrera, paper of the PTS (Workers' Party for Socialism) in
</FONT><A href="http://www.pts.org.ar/english.htm"><FONT face="Times New Roman"
size=3>http://www.pts.org.ar/english.htm</FONT></A><BR><BR><FONT
face="Times New Roman" size=3>Bourgeois rule in Argentina is undergoing a deep
crisis. This is linked to similar situations in many other countries in South
America, namely Bolivia, Ecuador and Peru. Since the end of military
dictatorship a bi-partisan bourgeois democratic rule set up. As the military
defeated the revolutionary rehearsal of the 1970s and imposed hard conditions on
the working class, bourgeois democracy has continued in dropping labour
conquests. For instance, one of these defeats was the privatisation of almost
the whole of the state-run companies and public services from 1991 on, under the
Menem government. The current situation has a lot to do with this. Argentine
Airlines, the official state-run airline, was sold off ten years ago to the
SEPI, a Spanish partnership that runs companies owned by the Spanish state
worldwide. Ten years later, the airline is on the brink of bankruptcy. Spanish
imperialists and servile Argentine government accuse the workers of looting the
airline. The conflict has had dramatic developments and is still going on. It
began nearly a month ago, and it has become a sort of "national cause"
developing an embryonic but increasing anti-imperialist sensibility, as the
bourgeois rule, its politicians and its institutions appear more and more as
puppets before the eyes of the masses. As list-members know, I have posted on
the airline conflict before so I won't go further with this.<BR>All along this
week, the other main conflict in Argentina is the government's class war against
the unemployed workers movement in Salta, in the North. As I'm posting this, the
armed forces have killed at least two people -official numbers. Bourgeois
democracy in backward countries such as those from Latin America is even much
more formal than in imperialist countries. Therefore, "democracy for the rich"
in Argentina has increasing bonapartist features. Recovering the methodology of
the military dictatorship, the government is currently kidnapping the leaders of
the movement. Nearly 40 people are still "missing" -officially they are neither
dead, nor imprisoned, and nobody knows where they are. This not by chance, since
the unmemployed workers' movement from Salta is the best organised and the most
advanced among the various movements of that kind currently found here.
Highly-organised and militant unemployed workers' movements are a special
characeristic of class struggle in Argentina. They are fighting for
recovering their jobs in the former state-run oil company YPF, currently owned
by Spanish REPSOL. They have developed pickets and road blockages, even
integrating them as a part of an effective military strategy which has defeated
the gendarmerie many times, with full support and participation of the
population. In November 2000, as police repressed pickets and murdered a
striking transport worker, the population enraged. They looted and set on fire
the town halls in Salta, then they took police stations and the gendarmerie
headquarters, keeping policemen as hostages, looting all their guns and then
setting the buildings on fire. <BR>The government and the bourgeoisie want to
destroy the movement. They have a lot of reasons to be afraid of. Employed
workers and the majority of the middle layers are more and more sympathetic to
the unemployed and their actions. Besides, together with the Airline workers,
employed workers are facing and will have to face a full-scale attack on their
conquests, since the anti-labour act -which was scandalously enacted last year
by means of briberies funded by companies- has to be carried out. Nevertheless,
it's not that easy to do so, as the workers have made five massive general
strikes -the last one just a couple of weeks ago- increasingly exercising their
muscles in political fight -as Lenin conceived general strikes- during a highly
instable electoral -parliamentary- year. In a few hours, a massive demo called
by the trade union leadership will take place, repudiating the government and
repression-murder in Salta and in solidarity with Airline workers.<BR><BR>If you
have more questions or want more info just ask. We will be telling you of
further articles in English as they are uploaded to the web.</FONT><BR><BR><FONT
face="Times New Roman" size=3>See also: </FONT><A
href="http://www.destroyimf.org"><FONT face="Times New Roman"
size=3>www.destroyimf.org</FONT></A></FONT></DIV></BODY></HTML>