Panama Protests 2022 - Amid inflation crisis

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The Last Stand

Lady Bougainvillea
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Aug 17, 2018
Panamanians are taking to the streets to protest the lack of government action against current inflation.


Thousands of Panamanians have been on strike since July 1 to demand the government of Laurentino Cortizo take immediate action to address the country’s economic crisis
July 05, 2022 by Peoples Dispatch
Panama-strike.jpg

Workers participate in a road blockade to demand the government take immediate measures to address their demands. Photo: SUNTRACS
The people of Panama continue protests against the high cost of living and to demand government action to resolve the growing economic crisis. The protests began on July 1 to mark three years since the beginning of the government of right-wing president Laurentino Cortizo. Since then, workers, fisherfolk, students, educators, and civilians have braved heavy police repression, staging blockades of key roads and marching in major cities to make their demands to the government heard.
The mobilizations are organized by social movements and trade unions from across diverse sectors of Panamanian society that came together in the People United for Life Alliance including the National Front for the Defense of Economic and Social Rights (FRENADESO) and the Single Union of Construction Workers (SUNTRACS). During a meeting in May, the Alliance created a list of 32 demands “in light of the grave economic, political, and social situation the country is suffering under and the lack of response and attention of the authorities.”


“We want to send a clear message to the government that we are willing to fight for a better quality of life, for a better salary, down with the high fuel costs! Without struggle, there can be no victories”

The demands include freezing the price of fuel and basic commodities, a general increase in salaries and pensions, freezing the price of medicine and resolving the lack of supply, measures to combat corruption, repairing schools, roads, and public infrastructure, rejecting the four bilateral US-Panama military bases, policies to support the Indigenous communities and ensure the respect of their autonomy, among others.

In their letter to the national government, they highlighted that in response to the crisis that was made worse by the COVID-19 pandemic, there is consensus amongst international bodies such as the ILO and the UN, that governments should take measures that protect the rights of people and broaden the social safety net for the most vulnerable.

However, they state, Panama has taken the opposite approach and has continued to be oriented towards the “recovery only of the rate of profit and the protection of capital”.
The Alliance had attempted to raise the list of demands to the national government on several occasions, but had been summarily told that the government could not address any of them. The closure of the doors of dialogue led the Alliance to call for national mobilizations beginning on July 1.

In a statement released by FRENADESO, they highlighted that the protests take place “amid a social crisis, provoked by neoliberal policies that got worse during the pandemic, such as the price of food, medicine, fuel, the increase in unemployment and informal employment, debt, corruption among other things.” They emphasize that “the Panamanian people have taken to the streets to demand effective solutions for the collective good…while the government of Cortizo continues to put the country in further debt, making Panama, according to Bloomberg, one of the most indebted of the continent.”

FRENADESO further denounced the arbitrary detentions of several leaders during the protests such as Ariel Rodríguez, a union leader from SUNTRACS, who on July 1 was arrested and put in jail in Chiriquí. Rodríguez was released later that day following protests and social media campaigns demanding the same.
Leaders from the Alliance will meet in the Meeting of Leaders on July 6 in Panama City to discuss their list of demands and the response of the government so far.
 
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Yeah there's little to nothing the government of that tiny nation can do to actually make things better. They're but one of many small countries being carried along on a much larger tide.
 
Yeah there's little to nothing the government of that tiny nation can do to actually make things better. They're but one of many small countries being carried along on a much larger tide.
I feel that increasing the cost of living would be a temporary solution. Printing too much money without value will bring them back to where they started.
 
You own one of the most lucrative low-labor, low-maintenance cash cows in the world (which you got for fucking free), have huge amounts of immensely farmable land land and fishable oceans, have zero requirement for military funding and still can't manage to do basic country things. I thought you had a man and a plan. Instead you just have a bunch of African style gimme gimmes.
 
Similar story going on in Argentina, maybe Sri lanka inspired some people into the street? Sadly, the average latin american is cucked beyond help thanks to decades of socialist dictatorships and US intervention, and unless things get really, really ugly then they'll just get tired and go back home.
Netherlands, Sri Lanka, Panama and now Argentina. If three is a pattern, four is...?
 
Hmm...this seems more leftist bullshit but using inflation as an excuse rather than a more organic movement. I highly doubt people giving a shit about inflation gives two flying fucks about Indigenous issues or US/Panama military bases.
People aren't making enough money to sustain themselves after the COVID lockdowns. How on Earth is this a "leftist movement?"
 
People aren't making enough money to sustain themselves after the COVID lockdowns. How on Earth is this a "leftist movement?"

It's the list of demands that are making me raise eyebrows. Now, could just be the obviously biased source adding things, but why would, say, the average Panamanian care about Indigenous issues or military bases when it is protesting inflation?

However, some basic Googling states FRENADESO and SUNTRACS are basically militant unionists/socialists. Leftists can't help but throw in pet causes while trying to act as if they're somehow a populist movement.
 
The demands include freezing the price of fuel and basic commodities, a general increase in salaries and pensions, freezing the price of medicine and resolving the lack of supply, measures to combat corruption, repairing schools, roads, and public infrastructure, rejecting the four bilateral US-Panama military bases, policies to support the Indigenous communities and ensure the respect of their autonomy, among others
It sounds like the protestors want inflation to go through the roof Venezuela-style.

Anyways, have we figured out how George Soros is connected yet?
 
It sounds like the protestors want inflation to go through the roof Venezuela-style.
It always baffles me why people want a repeat of the same steps or process that led to the worst economic, political and humanitarian crisis in the history of my country.

Like, don't you see what happened to us? To the others that tried the same? Are you seriously that retarded to try it?
 
I was gonna say something finally fucking happened with the panama papers?!

:(
It is funny the poors are revolting first though instead of any of the big countries.
Then again apparently the protestors are actually retarded. so uh.
 
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