Spaniards strike against 'unstoppable' job reforms
Spanish workers have staged a
general strike to protest against labour reforms which the government declared
"unstoppable" but many ignored the action, fearing for their jobs in
a country with the EU's highest unemployment rate.Factories across the nation
were silent and ports closed, while television and transport were disrupted by
the strike against the austerity policies of Prime Minister Mariano Rajoy -
whom Spaniards elected by a landslide only four months ago.Police arrested a
number of protesters in Madrid while small-scale violence flared in Barcelona,
Spain's second city. Tourists were locked out of the Alhambra, a 14th-century
Moorish palace in the southern city of Granada which is one of Europe's great
cultural monuments.Strikers promised a wave of protests to confront Rajoy's
conservative government over reforms making it cheaper for companies to fire
staff and dismantling a nationwide system of collective pay bargaining."We
don't have much hope, but this is just the beginning," said Trini Cuesta,
a 58-year-old employee at a public hospital in Barcelona. "It's not just
about labour reform, we're against policies that are provoking social and
economic ruin. Social protests must rise."Spain is tipping into its
second recession since the end of 2009 and some observers expect at least
another million people to join already swollen unemployment lines. The jobless
rate is already 23% and almost half of under 25-year-olds are out of
work.Rajoy's government said it was committed to making labour reforms which it
argues will help to reduce unemployment by making the labour market more
efficient. "The agenda for reform is unstoppable," Labour Minister
Fatima Banez said.Police presence was particularly heavy around parliament
where politicians were putting in a longer work day than usual as Rajoy sought
approval for five different measures, including funding for indebted local
governments to pay suppliers.Spaniards have so far been tolerant of Rajoy's
efforts to reform the labour market and meet strict European Union-imposed
deficit goals to ensure it avoids a Greek-style debt crisis.But the general
strike, the first since September 2010, showed that patience may be wearing
thin. The largest union put support for the strike at 77% while the government
said the work day was proceeding normally but gave no overall tally.Spain's
blue chip index fell 0.87%, its eighth consecutive session of declines as
concerns over the country's finances returned.There were pockets of violence in
Barcelona, where protesters set garbage bins on fire and threw chairs from the
famed outdoor cafes of Spain's second largest city onto the street, but no
injuries were reported.Union members waving red flags gathered in major cities
where they plastered stickers on shop windows reading "Closed for
Strike", though many remained open for business.Police barricaded
parliament and arrested 58 people in Madrid, many of whom were trying to stop
people going to work.Many workers crossed the picket lines, saying they feared
losing their jobs or unwilling to lose the average of around 100 euros which
will be docked from the pay cheques of the strikers.While many Spaniards are
fighting to preserve protection for their jobs, others are on short-term contracts
of typically six months with little protection.These workers fear their
employers could punish strikers by failing to renew their contracts when they
expire, and give the job instead to one of the army of unemployed.Fewer than a
fifth of Spanish employees are currently affiliated with the country's two
biggest unions and many feel they don't represent the wider workforce."A
lot of people actually blame the unions in part for the rigidity in the labour
market and lack of competitiveness, so they aren't exactly in the position to
rally a lot of people and the support for the strike reflects that," said
David Bach, political analyst at IE business school in Madrid.
However, union members are ready for
a long fight. "This is the largest cut of (workers') rights since anyone
can remember. There has to be a better way to get out of this crisis," UGT
union employee Marta Lois, 40, said on Madrid's main street Gran Via, where
protesters blocked traffic."Don't forget this is just the first major
event of what is likely going to be a long year of demonstrations against
government policies," Antonio Barroso, political analyst with Eurasia
Group said.Rajoy said on Tuesday his administration would pass a "very,
very, austere budget" on Friday. His goal of cutting the deficit this year
to 5.3% of gross domestic product implies nominal cuts of at least 35 billion
euros ($57 billion).The cuts are meant to keep borrowing costs down as well as
working towards meeting the EU's 3% deficit limit next year, but some economists
say they will deepen the looming recession.The strike halted overnight
production at factories from Barcelona in the north to Cadiz in the south, with
unions reporting full stoppages at General Motors Espana, Renault,
ArcelorMittal and Acerinox.Transport employees provided a basic level of
service, meaning one in four buses and about a third of metro and local trains
were expected to run. Most domestic and European flights were grounded although
long-haul services continued."We're offering the government a chance to
start a different path (of reform) in search of wider consensus," Ignacio
Fernandez Toxo, head of Spain's largest union
Comisiones Obreras said. "If not there will be rising social
conflict."Despite the promises to push on with reforms aimed at winning
approval from Brussels, Rajoy's People's Party suffered a surprise setback in a
regional election on Sunday, meaning he must measure his steps to avoid
provoking wider discontent.A high turnout is expected at an evening march in
Madrid that will end at the central Puerta del Sol square, cradle of last
year's anti-austerity "Indignant" movement.National grid operator REE
estimated electricity demand - a key indicator of economic activity - for
Thursday as a whole would drop by 14.8% from Wednesday to 571 gigawatt-hours, a
level comparable to a public holiday or a weekend.During the last general
strike in September 2010, demand fell by 12.6% from the day before.
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