In a series of reports on Argentina for its upcoming elections, the Al Jazeera news clip “Missing Out on Argentina’s Boom” reveals the widespread increasing wealth gap between the rich and the poor. This is despite the country managing a turnabout since the 2002 economic collapse, and with economic growth expected to reach 9% this year.
In reporting this phenomenon, she visited the province of Formosa and interviewed a Toba Indian, Marina Medina. With 12 children living in dilapidated huts, she complained that their houses flood when the rain comes. Even in a country famous for food production, the children are tiny due to malnutrition. The government provides a meagre lunch for them only on weekdays.
In another town, 300 km away from Formosa, Dr Lucie Adri told the reporter that tuberculosis, leprosy and the fatalistic Chagas disease is common amongst the villagers. 57% of the people living in this town do not earn enough to feed themselves.
In Buenos Aires, thousands of Argentinians live in slums, located in proximity to shining skycrapers.
As Lucia sums up in her report, “social inequality is a potential time bomb” waiting to explode.
Students have protested against Hugo Chavez who are making constitutional changes that they feel will seriously endanger civil liberties. The protestors are particularly worried about proposed changes which include detention without trial during a declared state of emergency. The constitutional changes, will however, be subjected to a popular referendum later in December 2nd. This is a large exercise considering that up to 67 constitutional amendments are debated and voted upon that would allow the government more control over the Central Bank, create new types of cooperative property and extend presidential terms from six to seven years; and even letting Chavez to run again in 2012.
Students also claimed that their protests are being stopped from reaching the National Assembly while pro-Chavez supporters are able to stage demonstrations without restrictions. Student leader Stalin Gonzalez, who was quoted on an Associated Press report, “Clashes break out at Venezuela protest”, dated October 23, said, “It’s clear proof of political discrimination.”
While Chavez has claimed that these changes are necessary to speed up socialist reforms in the country, proposed changes such as extending Presidential terms and allowing Chavez to run for unlimited terms will erode democratic values and destroy safeguards in preventing the country from sliding into authoritarianism. Detention without trial is an often used political tool by dictators to silence dissent and hold on to power.
The transition to socialism cannot mean replacing it with a political system which effectively prevents people from exercising their democratic rights. It appears, based on news reports, that the constitutional changes as advocated by Chavez is heading right for that slippery slope.