Spain hit by new wave of street protests

Thousands in several cities decry tough austerity measures, creating headache for ruling party facing local elections.

Thousands of protesters have marched across Spanish cities to decry tough austerity measures as the protest movement gains momentum, with signs it could culminate in a general strike in November.

Sunday’s march is the latest in a series of protests staged by hundreds of thousands of Spaniards almost on a daily basis over the past few months.

The protests have presented the centre-right government with a headache as it is due to hold regional elections.

Spanish labour unions said they would call a general strike if the government did not hold a referendum on unpopular spending cuts.

Prime Minister Mariano Rajoy unveiled $16.9bn in additional savings in a tough budget last month.

“It’s up to the government whether there’s a general strike or not. If they were going to hold a referendum things would be completely different,” said Ignacio Fernandez Toxo, leader of Spain’s biggest union, Comisiones Obreras.

The organisation told the Reuters news agency last week a strike could be held on November 14.

Spain is on the brink of being crippled by the euro zone economic crisis amid expectations that the government will soon seek European aid to keep its borrowing costs under control.

‘Losing everything’

“It’s shameful – we’re losing everything,” said Carmen Lopez, a department store worker at Sunday’s protest in the capital Madrid. “Pensions, salaries, public healthcare and education. They’re taking everything.”

Some 60,000 people attended the union-organised march in the centre of Madrid. “How can there be peace without bread?” and “Their plunder, my crisis”, placards read.

“I’m a teacher and they’ve really cut back in education – there are fewer resources, fewer teachers and more students,” said Agustin Moreno, who teaches in the Madrid neighbourhood of Vallecas.

“We will do everything we can. We will keep protesting,” he added.

Protesters wore colours of various unions, and many were clad in T-shirts saying “I used to have social and labour rights”.

“They’re taking away help for people who are unemployed, just at the time when people most need the help,” said primary school teacher Francisca Valverde.

Protests were taking place in dozens of cities on Sunday, but there were no reports of any violence.

Regional elections

Rajoy’s People’s Party (PP) faces regional elections in Galicia, the Basque Country and Catalonia – increasingly vocal about its desire to break away from Spain – in the coming weeks.

In the wake of violence during a protest in Madrid on September 25, Rajoy urged a business audience in New York last week to focus on the “silent majority” of Spaniards who do not protest.

But a survey in El Pais newspaper on Sunday showed 77 per cent of Spaniards support the protesters, while more than 90 per cent think protests will become more frequent.

The government is increasingly unpopular at home and must convince uneasy investors that it can keep a lid on social unrest and carry out its austerity policies.

The right to protest has become a topic of fierce debate in Spain since the Sept. 25 demonstration ended in 35 arrests and left 64 people injured.

Last week politicians from the  ruling PP said laws surrounding protests should be tightened up, with Madrid’s local government chief Ignacio Gonzalez saying the capital was in “a constant state of collapse” because of demonstrations.

But a Spanish court

on Thursday threw out a police case against the organisers of the protest, saying people had a right to express their opinion. The court will also investigate police brutality at Madrid’s Atocha station during the demonstration.

Source: News Agencies