Protests and repression spreading
10/07/2003
- Opinión
Protests against the new agreement with the IMF, the lack
of electricity and the high cost of living are spreading in
the Dominican Republic, while repression against the
movement has caused numerous cases of injury, persecution
and arrest, including that of Víctor Gerónimo, Coordinator
of the Collective of People's Organizations and Continental
Coordinator of the Convergence of Movements of the Peoples
of the Americas (COMPA).
Actions staged by demonstrators, who disrupt the traffic,
brandish kitchen utensils, organize parades before the
government offices of public services, are increasing
significantly: those who declare a standstill in their
communities or who face up to the police are becoming a
real headache for the authorities, which have ended up
losing their composure and declaring war against everyone
who shows signs of a lack a resignation because of the
difficult situation the country currently faces.
The current situation
The Dominican Republic is currently in a situation similar
to that which Argentina was in during December 2001, shaken
by constant inflation which has forced an increase in the
price of consumer goods, fuel and basic services by double,
triple and even six times their original amount; with power
cuts of up to 20 hours at a time and a gigantic bank fraud
representing 80 percent of the current budget. Meanwhile,
between December 2002 and July 2003, the rate of the peso
against the US dollar has doubled and continues to be
unstable.
For some time now many voices in the country have been
raised, signaling the dangers of Hipólito Mejía's
government following the neo-liberal policies of
privatization which, in a record time of less than two
years, has doubled the foreign debt and caused a huge
domestic debt, based on the false argument that the
Dominican Republic is a country of "low debts" and has the
"highest economic growth in the continent". Today's facts
speak for themselves.
In the hands of Bush and the IMF
Hipólito Mejía's government and the social democrat
Dominican Revolutionary Party have totally and shamefully
bowed down to Bush's aggressive policies, supporting
invasion on Iraq and now sending 300 troops to help
"reconstruct" the country, while on the other side, history
seems to be repeating the sad story of events in 1983 when
the government of the same party signed an agreement with
the IMF, at a cost of more than 100 lives, and plunged the
country into a course of economic instability and painful
adjustments that are now threatening to start again.
The solutions presented today are the same as those of
yesterday: solutions which resulted in the impoverishment
of more than 66 percent of Dominicans: more adjustments
will result in 100 thousand people losing their jobs within
a short period of time, extensive bankruptcy of small and
medium-sized firms, an increase in debts resulting from the
need to borrow more than 1 billion dollars and 5.5 billion
pesos in order to pay back debts; joining the FTAA by any
means and supporting Bush's war policies.
They want to silence the right to resist and protest
The government is doing everything within its power to
silence the voices that are courageously speaking up
against its policies. It has ordered the suspension of
media programs, the detention or subjugation of
communicators, threats by military and police chiefs,
violent confrontation against protests and the persecution
and arrest of people's leaders.
In the early hours of the morning of Thursday, July 10 the
house of Victor Gerónimo, Coordinator of the Collective of
Organizations of the Peoples and Continental Coordinator of
COMPA, was raided. The previous day Gerónimo had
participated in a protest in the neighborhood of Capotillo
de Santo Domingo, while protests were staged in other parts
of the country.
From the statement given by spokesman General Marte
Martínez, Chief of the National Police, there are signs
that the government is trying to bring false accusations
against the people's leader, accusing him of organizing
armed individuals in order to instigate violent protests,
using him to divert attention and put the movement on the
defensive.
Organizations announce days of national protest
Understanding this situation, Fernando Morillo of the
Council of People's Unity demanded that Víctor Gerónimo be
released while repeating the call for a National Day of
protest against agreements with the IMF, for Friday July
11, an activity which forms part of an extended program,
which induces the start, on July 23rd, of a march that will
cover 150 kilometers, from the Dominican Republic's second
city, Santiago de los Cabelleros, to Santo Domingo.
But the resistance will not give way. The experiences of
struggles accumulated by Dominican social movements
throughout the years is being put to the test by the
government itself, which has made a veritable declaration
of war on the movement with the arrest of Víctor Gerónimo,
threats by military chiefs, the power cuts, high living
costs and the difficult conditions of day-to-day life. (Translation by ALAI)
https://www.alainet.org/pt/node/107878
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