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sandensea

(21,639 posts)
Thu Jul 13, 2017, 06:12 PM Jul 2017

Police evict workers at shuttered PepsiCo plant in Argentina

Several workers, journalists, and 15 officers were injured in Argentina during an eviction of a shuttered PepsiCo plant occupied by around 20 laid off employees objecting to what they consider "the fraudulent closure of the establishment."

The eviction was carried out by Buenos Aires Province Police Infantry units, with assistance from the National Gendamarmie militarized police force. They advanced on the factory with tear gas and rubber bullets, while the workers responded with stones.

Numerous journalists, cameramen, and others reported being clubbed by police. Seven workers were arrested.

The shuttered plant, located in West Florida, a working class suburb northwest of Buenos Aires, was occupied by its former workers on June 26, six days after PepsiCo Argentina shuttered the facility.

The company reported downsizing its snack production by limiting it to a plant in Mar del Plata (250 mi S of Buenos Aires). They announced that of 691 workers affected, 155 will be relocated and the rest laid off and indemnified with two months' wages.

Union delegates, however, denounced that since the closure "not one worker was transferred" and that production was instead being substituted with imports from neighboring Chile, where labor costs are around 30% lower.

They pointed as well to the secret manner in which the eviction order was issued. "They are advancing after the judge gave in to the eviction request in a meeting held in the middle of the night," said delegate Camilo Monesm.

The plant closure is one of 3,200 factory shutdowns since President Mauricio Macri, a supporter of free trade and deregulation, took office 19 months ago - an average of seven a day. At least 45,000 workers have been affected as of March.

The CAME business chamber notes that while most shutdowns are of small or medium businesses, 105 larger factories (those with 100 or more employees) have closed as well. Many others have suffered partial layoffs.

Industrial production, CAME says, declined 5% in 2016 and 3% so far this year. Unemployment in the heavily industrial Greater Buenos Aires area, where this plant is located, jumped from 6.7% in 2015 to 11.8%.

At: https://translate.google.com/translate?sl=auto&tl=en&js=y&prev=_t&hl=en&ie=UTF-8&u=http%3A%2F%2Fwww.eldestapeweb.com%2Frepresion-pepsico-balas-goma-desalojaron-la-planta-y-detuvieron-trabajadores-n30869&edit-text=

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Police evict workers at shuttered PepsiCo plant in Argentina (Original Post) sandensea Jul 2017 OP
This kind of behavior has almost become common since Macri slimed into office, hasn't it? Judi Lynn Jul 2017 #1

Judi Lynn

(160,545 posts)
1. This kind of behavior has almost become common since Macri slimed into office, hasn't it?
Fri Jul 14, 2017, 12:18 AM
Jul 2017

The gov't has dragged out its thugs more times than could ever be considered normal already, to use against the people. It hasn't been that long, once you start considering the stark imagery involved, and what has actually been at stake. I just saw this term used, which I had no idea was a reality:

"Buenos Aires Province Police Infantry units." Really! Is that a leftover from the military dictatorship? Good grief. They should have disappeared decades ago, dissolved, replaced by ordinary police, wouldn't you think?

Going violent on workers, and journalists, alike. Looks as if their next "logical" step would be to start rounding up union leaders, just as fascists do every time they are consolidating their power. Argentina has been through all this prelude to nightmares before, not so long ago. The right-wing must feel it can't allow many people to be born to live as free people, or they will get too hard to control later on.

Another unbearable, among many, parts was the following:

"They pointed as well to the secret manner in which the eviction order was issued. "They are advancing after the judge gave in to the eviction request in a meeting held in the middle of the night," said delegate Camilo Monesm.""

This happens so often, doesn't it? Everywhere right-wing scum lurk, conspire, scheme, plot against the human race, honing their next treachery, all kinds of destructive things start getting done when the men and women are sleeping, trying to trudge back the next day to do everything all over again, including getting raped by being paid far less than they actually should earn, and paying far more for products than they should, just because the corporations have bought enough politicians to legislate thievery, and near-slavery, exploitation of their betters!

That lovely refrain goes through one's mind: "Dirty deeds done dirt cheap!"

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