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Subject: Mass Strikes In Ecuador
Date: 19 Jul 2002 03:07:13 -0700
http://news.ft.com/servlet/ContentServer?pagename=FT.com/StoryFT/FullStory&c
=StoryFT&cid=1027002878087&p=1012571727176
Financial Times
July 18, 2002
Ecuador crippled by mass strikes
By Nicholas Moss in Quito
Published: July 18 2002 23:13 | Last Updated: July 18
2002 23:13
Ecuador was crippled on Thursday by strikes with
protesters from various sectors threatening further
action. Government negotiators appeared unable to
avoid strikes running into their third week on Monday
and the possible suspension of emergency returns to
work.
The coastal province of Esmeraldas, home to the Andean
nation's main oil refinery, was paralysed by marches
and blocked roads. Protesters, who want the central
government to recognise the province's claims in a
territorial dispute, left burning tyres on the airport
runway, virtually sealing it off from the outside.
Instead of seeing people streaming into the province,
whose beaches would normally be full of tourists now,
the province had to scale down production at the state
oil refinery because tankers could not leave by road
to dispatch petrol or domestic cooking gas to the
country.
Rodolfo Barniol, interior minister, said the
province's demands were in the hands of Congress, and
that the government would not interfere except to
maintain public order.
Meanwhile, in a hospital near the Amazonian city of
Tena, a 22-year-old pregnant woman died from
haemorrhages on Wednesday in the absence of medical
attention because the shift doctor had left to join
strike protests.
Some 14,000 national health workers have demanded
salary increases dating back to 2000. Only emergencies
were being attended to by the public hospitals while
nurses and doctors waited to see if the government
would pay the $11m it owed.
"The president, the ministers and Congress have had
salary increases. We want our raises or we will
maintain the strike to the ultimate consequences,"
said Carlos Gordillo, president of the Ecuadorean
Federation of Health Workers. He warned that in the
absence of a solution next week, the federation would
vote on a motion to suspend emergency services.
Other provinces threatened strikes to push for central
government funds. In Santo Domingo, Ecuador's third
largest city, 1,000 people marched to demand the
creation of a separate province, threatening to
radicalise actions next week.