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NEWS & LETTERS, JULY 2003

Peru social pressures

After 22 months of the Toledo government, it can be confirmed that the central tenet of neoliberal policies has not changed. In this context, the rural sector, the farmers and campesinos, have seen a systematic fall in prices, for the most part below the cost of production.  Poverty amongst the rural population has risen to 78%. So on May 26 hundreds of thousands of farmers and campesinos initiated a general strike with mass demonstrations and highway blockages that produced shortages in the country’s major urban centers.

The main demands are for: progressive tax reform; renegotiation of the external debt (which consumes approximately 25% of the government’s budget) in order to allow greater public investment in agriculture; price support guarantees; expanded credit; and greater protective tariffs. The movement also demands judicial security in defense of the communal lands and beneficiaries of agrarian reform who have come under attack by the huge mining and landowning corporations, and it has rejected the privatization of the water supply through concessions to private companies.

The May 26 general strike followed a national strike by the teachers that began on May 12 that has received the support of nearly 80% of the population and has reached into every corner of the country.

The government responded by declaring a state of emergency, which has provoked active resistance.  The height of resistance took place in Puno where 40,000 marched to protest the death of one student and 40 others injured by police gunfire.  On June 3 a nationwide mobilization against the state of emergency took place with 20,000 marching in Lima alone.

The Toledo government is on the precipice. However it is probable that Toledo will continue in power ever more isolated and unable to maneuver.  But it cannot be discounted that Peru may very well go the way of Argentina where the De la Rúa government collapsed.

From an interview with Victor Torres Lozado of the Confederacion Campesina del Peru that appeared in the June issue of TINTAJI, an independent left newspaper in Quito, Ecuador, translated by Roger H.

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