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Larissa
17th March 2003, 10:37
>From the Guardian:

The daily war

In Argentina, more than half of the people are living in poverty - and they are now starting to fight back

Naomi Klein
Monday March 17, 2003
The Guardian

On a muddy piece of squatted land in the outskirts of Buenos Aires, Florencia Vespignani is planning her tour of the US, where she will be speaking to students and activists about Argentina's resistance movements.

"I'm a bit scared," she confesses.

"Of the war?" I ask.

"No. Of the plane. We have wars here all the time."

Vespignani, a 33-year-old mother and community organiser, is a leader of the Movimiento de Trabajadores Desocupados (MTD), one of dozens of
organisations of unemployed workers, known as piqueteros, that have emerged out of the wreckage of Argentina's economy. When Florencia describes life as war, it is not a metaphor. In a country where more
than half the people are living in poverty and 27 children die of hunger each day, she has learned that to stay alive, you have to fight - for every piece of bread, for every student's pencil, for every night's rest.

>From the perspective of the International Monetary Fund, the piqueteros are the collateral damage of neoliberalism - a fluke explosion that happened when rapid-fire privatisation was mixed with "shock" austerity. In the mid-90s, hundreds of thousands of
Argentinians suddenly found themselves without pay cheques, welfare cheques or pensions. Rather than disappearing quietly into the shanty towns that surround Buenos Aires, they organised themselves into
militant neighbourhood-based unions. Highways and bridges were blocked until the government coughed up unemployment benefits; abandoned land was squatted to build homes; a hundred closed factories were taken over by their employees and put back to work.

Direct action became the alternative to theft and death. But that's not why Vespignani describes life in Argentina as a war.

The war is what happens next, after she and her neighbours dare to survive: the visits by armed thugs, the brutal evictions from squatted land and occupied factories, the assassinations of activists by police, the portrayal of piqueteros as terrorists.

Last month, Buenos Aires police used tear gas and rubber bullets to clear 60 families out of an abandoned building near the trendy Plaza Dorrego. It was the most severe repression in the city since two young leaders of the MTD were killed by police during a road blockade
last June. The police said they were concerned about the safety of the squat, but many think the violent eviction was simply part of the latest economic adjustment being cooked up at the Sheraton Hotel,
where IMF delegations have been meeting bankers and candidates in the upcoming presidential election for weeks now.

The IMF hopes to assess whether Argentina can be trusted with new loans: whether it will pay off foreign debts while continuing to cut social spending. But there is another criterion, left unspoken, that presidential aspirants must meet to merit foreign capital: they must
show that they are willing to use force to control those sectors hurt by such agreements.

S quatters, piqueteros and even the cartoneros - the armies of scavengers who comb through garbage looking for cardboard to sell - are under siege.

According to the former owner of Buenos Aires's largest privatised garbage company, now running for mayor on a platform of "Let's take back Buenos Aires", garbage is private property and the cartoneros are thieves.

That is the war Florencia is talking about, and as she travels across the US, she will have the difficult task of trying to make that case to activists who are almost exclusively focused on ending a different kind of war - not daily brutality and mass marginalisation.

Standing amid the torn-up cobblestones outside the squat on the night the 60 families were evicted, with tear gas still hanging in the air and dozens of people in jail, I found myself thinking about the calls for "peace" coming from Europe and North America. The anti-war
message resonates forcefully here, and tens of thousands participated in the global day of action on February 15. But peace? What does peace mean in a country where the right that most needs defending is
the right to fight?

My friends in South Africa tell me that the situation there is much the same: families evicted from miserable shanty towns, police and private security using bullets and tear gas to force people from their homes, and, last month, the suspicious murder of Emily Nengolo, a 61-year-old activist fighting water privatisation. Instead of
devoting their energy to securing food, jobs and land, social movements around the world are being forced to spend their time fighting the low-level war against their own criminalisation.

The great irony is that these movements are actually waging the real war on terrorism - not with law and order but by providing alternatives to the fundamentalist tendencies that exist wherever there is true desperation. They are developing tactics that allow
some of the most marginal people on earth to meet their needs without using terror - by blockading roads, squatting in buildings, occupying land and resisting displacement.

February 15 was more than a demonstration; it was a promise to build a truly international anti-war movement. If that is going to happen, North Americans and Europeans will have to confront the war on all
its fronts: to oppose an attack on Iraq and reject the branding of social movements as terrorist. The use of force to control Iraq's resources is only an extreme version of the force used to keep markets open and debt payments flowing in countries such as Argentina
and South Africa. In places where daily life is like war, the people who are militantly confronting this brutality are the peace activists. We all want peace. But let's remember that it won't come without a fight.

·A version of this article first appeared in the Nation. Naomi Klein is the author of Fences and Windows

www.nologo.org

Larissa
17th March 2003, 12:53
Important comment of a friend (who lives in Argentina)

This talk about "MTD leaders" is a plain lie, Naomi Klein or no Naomi Klein. The piqueteros explicitly decided in a national meeting of MTDs in 2000 not to have **any** "leaders". All their decisions are taken by a show of hands, their coordinators are "elected" by a draw and rotated every few days. They don't even have a central coordination body in order to avoid the need for permanent delegates.

When they do have to send a delegate somewhere, the person is again chosen by a draw and has just this one mandate, with very precise instructions on how to vote. Normally, if a subject pops up that was not on the previously agreed agenda, they won't even abstain, but declare that they do not have a mandate to vote on the issue.

So there goes another media personality lying through her radical teeth to protect the existence of leaders and media personalities.

Tomás Rosa Bueno
Revocable delegate of himself
Member of the Colegiales neighborhood assembly
Observer of the Solano MTD monthly Roca Negra meetings
No representación - No delegación

Sirion
17th March 2003, 16:15
Thanks Larissa, there is no way to describe my gratitude for your posting of Latin-American information.

notyetacommie
18th March 2003, 14:32
This way of true POPULAR voting is very similar to what happened in Novgorod county, in Russia, in the Medieval times. This is also a living example of anarchy. If it turns out to be victorious in combat with poverty, then the US status of the "most democratic" nation is in danger. Keep on fighting, people of Argentina! Keep on fighting for freedom and the right to live in a different world! Larissa, could you tell us if we could assist in something? Communism is FIRST of ALL internationalism.

Larissa
18th March 2003, 16:42
Sirion: You're welcome, I hope I can post more about Latin America.

Notyetacommie, welcome to the Forum! And thanks for your support. We have been fighting hard for the past (at least) 40 years, and we will never quit struggling. :smile:

Hasta la victoria siempre!