(26 Sep 2024)
RESTRICTION SUMMARY:
ASSOCIATED PRESS
Buenos Aires, Argentina – 6 September 2024
1. Miriam Sidimarco and her daughter Tisiana, 10, get food at a soup kitchen
2. Various of Sidimarco and her daughter eating on the sidewalk
3. SOUNDBITE (Spanish) Miriam Sidimarco, street vendor:
"If I don’t eat, it doesn’t matter. The point is that she has a plate of food. I make do for her."
4. Martin Lopez holds his 1-year-old son Bruno next to his wife Esabel while they wait in line for a free meal at a church
5. Lentil soup
6. SOUNDBITE (Spanish) Martin Lopez, unemployed:
"We fell into this situation after the first austerity measures and could no longer resolve our economic situation. As if that were not enough, I lost my job, and everything became much more difficult. So, unfortunately, we have to resort to soup kitchens to survive."
ASSOCIATED PRESS
La Plata, Argentina – 29 August 2024
7. Various of Oscar Arlotta, 26, looking for recyclable goods to sell at a landfill
8. SOUNDBITE (Spanish) Oscar Arlotta, 26, unemployed:
"Here, most people have families, but people don’t see that. Many are against us but don’t see that we eat from the garbage. We find a soda and drink it. All day long, we live here and eat from the garbage dump. It’s the only decent job we have."
9. People at the landfill
ASSOCIATED PRESS
Buenos Aires, Argentina – 19 September 2024
10. Laboratory technician Emilce Correa marches for better salaries
11. Workers from the Juan P. Garrahan Children’s Hospital hold a work stoppage inside the hospital
12. Correa clapping
13. Correa chanting UPSOUND (Spanish) "We want a salary raise of 100 percent."
14. SOUNDBITE (Spanish) Emilce Correa, laboratory technician:
"I have been working at the hospital for 13 years, and my salary is still below the poverty line. So I have to work doing (extra) shifts. I do shifts in Berazategui and Monte Grande (outside Buenos Aires city). I have to go anywhere to do shifts, which are very far away. And it’s very exhausting because as soon as I finish a shift, I have to go into the hospital, and the situation is the same for most hospital workers because we have salaries like that."
ASSOCIATED PRESS
Buenos Aires, Argentina – 6 September 2024
15. Various of Buenos Aires city
16. Agustín Salvia, Director of the Argentine Social Debt Observatory at the Catholic University of Argentina
17. SOUNDBITE (Spanish) Agustín Salvia, Sociologist:
"The immediate effect of any adjustment program is to increase poverty. That is, (when the government) reduces public spending, prevents the fiscal deficit, generates an economic recession in the market, lowers wages and pensions for retirees, reduces benefits and profits from provincial revenue sharing, and suspends public works. Wow, right?"
ASSOCIATED PRESS
Buenos Aires, Argentina – 26 September 2024
18. Manuel Adorni, government spokesperson at news conference
19. SOUNDBITE (Spanish) Manuel Adorni, government spokesperson: ++TRANSLATOR AT SOURCE++
"It is a number (of poverty) that will surely reflect the harsh reality that Argentine society is going through and, of course, is a consequence of the populism that has subjected Argentina to so many years of misfortune and devastation."
ASSOCIATED PRESS
La Plata, Argentina – 29 August 2024
20. Various of people eating a free meal at a cooperative of garbage recyclers
STORYLINE:
Argentina’s poverty rate jumped from 41.7% to 52.9% during the first six months of Javier Milei’s presidency, the statistics agency reported Thursday, a rise that reflects the pain of the country’s most intense austerity program in recent memory.
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