SPAIN PROTEST
Thousands of police, teachers and hospital staff staged a mass protest
march in Barcelona on Saturday in growing anger at spending cuts hitting
key services in Spain's Catalonia region.
"No to the Cuts," read a
banner at the head of the crowd, which included prison guards,
firefighters and nurses protesting at cuts that they warn are
undermining security, education and health.
Thousands of
participants joined in, with turnout estimates by various organisers,
authorities and media varying from 15,000 to 125,000.
Spending
cuts aimed at stabilising Spain's public finances are hitting its
regions hard, adding to the pain of an unemployment rate that crept
close to 23 percent at the end of 2011, with more than five million
people out of work."There are more pupils per class with fewer
resources and fewer teachers," said one demonstrator, schoolteacher
Maite Sanchez, 29. "The quality of education is beginning to be
seriously affected by the cuts."
Another, Rosalia Port, a
56-year-old nurse, insisted: "There are other kinds of cuts that can be
made, such as fighting tax fraud and raising taxes for those who earn
the most."
It was the latest in a series of mass protests against measures to resolve the crisis.
Tens
of thousands of public sector workers in several towns in Valencia,
Spain's most heavily indebted region, demonstrated on Thursday to
protest cuts there.
Catalonia's regional parliament is currently
debating the budget for 2012 which includes cuts of 625 million euros
($826 million) to rein in its deficit to 1.3 percent of gross domestic
product this year.
Cuts to health, security and education budgets
began last year, and at the end of 2011 the region also proposed to hike
taxes and fees for services such as universities, public transport and
water.
Saturday's march was marked by the participation of
regional police officers, prison guards and firefighters who warned the
budget cuts prompted by the financial crisis are undermining security.
"It's an explosive cocktail," said David Miquel, a spokesman for the Catalan police union SPC, ahead of the march."We lack equipment and vehicles. The situation is pathetic. In some cases there are no vehicles to carry out operations." Spain's
central government said Friday it had approved a new budget law that
bans the country's 17 powerful regions from sliding into deficit from
2020.
Saturday's march united civil servants from all the main
sectors of Catalonia's public services, including prison guards who
blocked the entrances to some prisons last weekend in protest at planned
pay cuts.
"Sometimes there are just two guards for 500 inmates," a prison guards representative, Albert Anton, told AFP





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