February 14, 2002 by the Inter Press Service

Argentina's Rebellion in the Neighborhoods 

by Marcela Valente 

BUENOS AIRES, Feb 13 - Neighborhood assemblies are springing up in
cities
throughout Argentina, particularly in the capital and surrounding
areas, as
a groundswell of people seek to change the political landscape amidst
the
country's social and economic collapse. 

Many assembly participants are young people who are fed up with the
political parties they say have betrayed their ideals. But there are
also
many unemployed, out-of-business shopkeepers, retirees, teachers and
professionals also taking an active role in the meetings. Many had
never
taken part in any citizen-based mobilization before in their lives. 

There are several common denominators among the assemblies held each
week
since late December in more than 50 neighborhoods, such as the rising
anxieties of the most desperate and the increasing calm among those
attempting to organize grassroots participation to make their demands
heard.


The vast majority of the neighbors participating in the assemblies
believe
that political leaders are ignorant of the people's needs. In many
cases
residents do not personally know their elected city council members
and
local legislators, nor where they live. They are seen as mere
representatives of political parties. 

Now, however, independent citizens are adopting the terminology
characteristic of party politics: assemblies, agendas, motion for
order,
moderators, committees, and liaison commissions. 

But few assembly participants have grand hopes for change. They say,
at
least, that they want to remain alert to the government's measures,
channel
their need for participation and expression, and try to put some new
faces
in the political arena, even if the new politicians lack experience. 

"Everyone is completely fed up with corrupt politicians. We are not
against
democracy, but the neighbors seem to be allergic to anything that
smells
like politics," Carmen Fern�ndez, a teacher from Buenos Aires' Palermo
neighborhood and head of her district's Education Committee, told IPS.


There is a great deal of talk at the assemblies about the "common
enemy",
which everyone agrees are Argentina's political leaders. The
neighborhood
organizations have been careful to maintain a horizontal structure, in
which
everyone has the right to make proposals, and leaders seem to emerge
based
on who best facilitates participation. 

Usually someone offers a warehouse for a meeting site in case of rain,
and
someone else offers a printing press to print posters or a newsletter.
At
one assembly, young filmmakers proposed to record the sessions for a
documentary. Attorneys, accountants and doctors offer their
professional
services. 

The slogan heard most often is "all the politicians out", but the
assembly-goers insist this is not a call for an end to the democratic
system. 

"On the contrary. To get out of this crisis requires more politics, but
real
politics. These meetings of common people on the street are the
fundamental
form of doing politics," Roli Sampieri, an accountant in charge of the
Press
Committee for the Almagro neighborhood assembly in the capital, told
IPS. 

"When a married couple decides to separate, that doesn't mean that
they
won't go on to marry someone else. This is the same thing: we don't
want
these politicians. We want a change," Sampieri said. 

Only the ongoing street protests by the Argentine people can convince
the
career politicians to think of the common good and not about personal
gain,
according to the activist. In the long term, there will have to be a
change
in leadership that is founded on a more community-based conception of
politics, he added. 

Another Almagro neighbor, Mario Colombati, agrees. "We are not
satisfied
with merely casting a vote at election time. We want to participate and
we
want them to listen to us more often, because that is the main problem,
they
don't listen to us," he said in a conversation with IPS. 


In last October's legislative elections (the vote is compulsory in
Argentina), Colombati annulled his ballot in protest to express his
discontent with the political parties. But, he said, "we cannot live
without
politicians, because that would be anarchy. We want those who robbed us
to
leave, and we want to closely monitor those who replace them," he said.


Most of the neighborhood assemblies were founded after the first major
"caceroleo" protest, when Argentines came out in masses, banging pots
and
pans in protest against then president Fernando de la R�a, who resigned
Dec
20. 

At first it was just a handful of neighbors who gathered together,
concerned
about preventing the new government from being made up of the same
leaders
with a different disguise. 

With the series of political turnovers and the ever-deepening social
and
economic crisis, the meetings have achieved greater impact, and new
leaders
are emerging. The neighbors at the assemblies choose delegates who
participate every Sunday in an inter-neighbourhood plenary session,
which
draws some 4,000 people. 

There, representatives from middle-class districts mix with those from
the
wealthiest and the poorest neighborhoods Their proposals often become
radicalized, and protests are expressed on behalf of an array of
groups: the
unemployed, merchants, former party activists, and savers who have been
hurt
by the government's economic measures of the last two months. 

The non-governmental organization 'Poder Ciudadano' (Citizen Power)
offered
the assembly participants a free course in institutional monitoring.
The
program is called "Citizens as protagonists of change" and seeks to
provide
practical tools to the movement that expresses itself in
'cacerolazos',
neighborhood meetings and marches. 

But there are many who appear already to possess some working knowledge
as a
result of their activism in student organizations, political parties
or
labor unions. 

"The assembly shall be considered constituted when at least 20
neighbors are
present. All who live in the neighborhood may participate with voice
and
vote," reads a woman, aided by a brand- new megaphone, on a street
corner
where more than a hundred residents have gathered. 

"The executive committee shall meet 15 minutes prior to the assembly
to
draft the agenda with the proposals provided by the neighbors," she
says,
handing the word - and the megaphone - over to the "moderator". It is
clarified repeatedly that "here, no one is in charge, we are going to
take
turns." 

One of the proposals made during the assembly was to set aside 15
minutes
each week on a neighborhood radio program to provide updates about the
movement. The proposal was readily accepted. 

But when the moderator announced that a television news program has
sent a
reporter and a camera operator, the reaction is one of absolute
rejection,
with the neighbors shouting for the media representatives to leave. 

The reporter is from a program whose host has supported the
government's
economic reforms in the past few years and who now is seen as inciting
protest with a right-wing discourse. The neighbors make it clear they
do not
want anyone to use them to advance a cause they do not agree with. 

In fact, in the assemblies and in mass e-mails, Argentines are calling
not
only for the removal of the career politicians and entrenched union
leaders,
but also for the rejection of the privatized entities entrusted with
public
services and of the news media which, they say, are not accurately
portraying the population's suffering. 

"I am very surprised because there are people participating who
otherwise
never left their homes. My 70-year-old neighbor had never taken part
in
anything, but now she has such an extremist stance that it is truly
astonishing," said Palermo neighborhood assembly participant Fern�ndez.


She said one of the slogans repeated in her neighborhood is "the
politicians
must go because they do not understand a thing." Fern�ndez explained
that
this reflects the sentiment that political leaders no longer
comprehend, nor
can they express, the citizenry's problems because they are too far
removed
from that reality. 

For Sampieri, the national crisis was a long time in the making and
these
assemblies are a response to the loss of credibility of the political
system
in general. "Politics continues to be the only way to express one's
self,
but the people reject the political parties, and therefore are
gathering in
the streets," he said. 

Some of the initiatives coming out of the assemblies include organizing
a
volunteer corps to provide assistance to retirees and the unemployed
and to
help with the needs outlined by hospital personnel, but the priority
is
ultimately to take their proposals to the national level. 

The neighborhood assemblies are planning a march on the legislative
palace
when the lawmakers gather to debate the government budget, protests
outside
bank headquarters to protest the transfer to pesos - the national
currency -
of dollar deposits, and demonstrations against the representatives of
the
International Monetary Fund (IMF) who visit Argentina. 

"I don't know if this will lead to change, but at least it is teaching
us to
be more alert," said one resident as she headed home after an assembly
meeting.

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