This article is from the source 'bbc' and was first published or seen on . It will not be checked again for changes.
You can find the current article at its original source at http://news.bbc.co.uk/go/rss/-/1/hi/world/americas/7317869.stm
The article has changed 3 times. There is an RSS feed of changes available.
Version 0 | Version 1 |
---|---|
Argentine leader warns strikers | Argentine leader warns strikers |
(about 1 hour later) | |
Argentina's president has said she will not negotiate with striking farmers until they end their protests over rising taxes on major export goods. | Argentina's president has said she will not negotiate with striking farmers until they end their protests over rising taxes on major export goods. |
Cristina Fernandez said in a televised address that she would not talk "with a pistol pointed at the head". | Cristina Fernandez said in a televised address that she would not talk "with a pistol pointed at the head". |
The strike, now in its third week, has led to food shortages in shops and has also hit exports. Farmers' leaders have called for talks with the government. | The strike, now in its third week, has led to food shortages in shops and has also hit exports. Farmers' leaders have called for talks with the government. |
The strike has also led to clashes in the capital Buenos Aires. | The strike has also led to clashes in the capital Buenos Aires. |
Revenue needed | Revenue needed |
Many shops and markets are reporting shortages | |
President Fernandez warned that "there can be no dialogue if the strike measures aren't lifted". | |
"Lift the strike and we'll talk," she said, adding that the protests were directed "not against the government, but against the people". | |
The president's comments came shortly after farmers' leaders had called for dialogue with the government. | |
The latest crisis was sparked by the government's decision to introduce a new sliding scale of export taxes, raising levies in some cases up to 45%. | The latest crisis was sparked by the government's decision to introduce a new sliding scale of export taxes, raising levies in some cases up to 45%. |
President Fernandez says the taxes are a means to raise badly-needed revenue, curb inflation and guarantee domestic supplies. | |
Blockades | |
But farmers say the taxes are hitting them, and their communities, hard. | But farmers say the taxes are hitting them, and their communities, hard. |
There have been angry scenes at some roadblocks | |
"Our profit margins are getting smaller and smaller," Marcelo Rasseto, a small farmer from Santa Fe province, told the BBC. | |
"What we pay to the state is not returned to us in the form, for example, of subsidies to buy fertilisers or to promote the social and educational development of our communities. | |
Protesters have been stopping lorries carrying farm produce and either turning them back or dumping their goods on the road. | |
Trade at grain and cattle markets has also been disrupted, while several suppliers of Argentine soya and soya oil to China have been unable to fulfil export contracts, industry officials told Reuters. | |
The farmers' action has also led to meat and dairy shortages in the shops. | |
There was a second night of demonstrations in Buenos Aires on Thursday, as hundreds rallied against the government. | |
Pro-government supporters also took to the streets and local media showed brawls between the rival groups. | |
Argentina, a leading exporter of beef, corn, soya oil and soybeans, has benefited from the recent global surge in commodity prices. |