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Title: Food riots rock Yemen
Source: [None]
URL Source: http://www.inteldaily.com/?c=148&a=5876
Published: Apr 4, 2008
Author: By Bill Weinberg
Post Date: 2008-04-04 20:53:33 by DeaconBenjamin
Keywords: None
Views: 500
Comments: 17

Tanks have been deployed in parts of southern Yemen after a fifth day of angry protests by thousands of mostly young people. Youth are blocking roads and burning tires, and up to 100 have been arrested. In al-Dalea, two police station were torched, and military vehicles burned, while riot police fired into the air and used tanks against street barricades. In response, armed protesters threw up roadblocks on the main road between the capital, Sanaa, and the port of Aden, halting traffic.

The unrest started in the Radfan region of al-Dalea province March 30 and spread the next day to the province of Lahj. President Ali Abdullah Saleh called an emergency meeting of the National Defense Council on April 3. Al-Dalea residents report that one of at least 14 people wounded had died. The official Saba news agency said April 2 there were no fatalities.

Rising food prices helped trigger the protests. The price of wheat has doubled since February, while rice and vegetable oil have gone up 20%. Disaffection in southern Yemen has been long-standing following the civil war of 1994, in which the south lost its independence. Southerners say a government amnesty granting former southern soldiers re-admission to the army has not been fulfilled, and that they are kept out of government jobs

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#13. To: DeaconBenjamin (#0)

us.ft.com/ftgateway/super..._id=fto033120081436516384

Argentina crisis deepens over farm protests

By Jude Webber in Buenos Aires Monday Mar 31 2008

Snip: "Talks between Argentine farmers and the government to end a 20-day protest that has paralysed food supplies and sparked the worst political crisis in five years remained deadlocked on Monday ahead of the announcement of a package of measures for small producers.

The government - which has refused to negotiate with farm leaders unless their roadblocks are lifted completely - was expected to unveil subsidies and other compensation for small producers worth about $475m (€300m, £238m) to offset the impact of a new sliding scale of export tariffs on key crops such as soy, which they say unfairly penalises them."

angle  posted on  2008-04-05   9:18:09 ET  Reply   Untrace   Trace   Private Reply  


Replies to Comment # 13.

#14. To: angle (#13)

Worldwide Homi-cide ... (these aren't the actual words ... but who cares ?

noone222  posted on  2008-04-05 09:37:13 ET  Reply   Untrace   Trace   Private Reply  


#16. To: angle (#13)

An update

Argentina Farmers Await Tax Talks Two Days After Ending Strike

April 4 (Bloomberg) -- Argentine farmers, who ended a 21- day strike two days ago for talks with government officials, have yet to arrange a meeting to discuss a tax increase on exports that led to food shortages last month.

``We're still waiting for a call from the government to start negotiations,'' Luciano Miguens, the president of Argentina's Rural Society, the country's biggest farm group, said today in a telephone interview from his farm in Buenos Aires province. ``We want to show them proposals to analyze.''

Farmers halted the strike for 30 days to facilitate talks over tax increases on grain and oilseeds enacted March 11. Unless the levies are repealed, the growers said at a rally April 2 that they will return to picket lines on highways across the nation and further restrict agricultural shipments.

Some top government officials are slated to take trips outside the country. Economy Minister Martin Lousteau travels tonight to Miami, where he will attend an Inter-American Development Bank meeting. Argentine President Cristina Fernandez de Kirchner plans to travel to Paris tomorrow to meet with President Nicolas Sarkozy, according to her press office.

The government may be adjusting some proposals it plans to show to farm groups before approaching them for talks, Buenos Aires newspaper Cronista reported today.

Some farmers may be withholding soybeans and corn to exporters after the Argentine Rural Confederation advised them to wait for an outcome to the talks, Miguens said.

Port Disruptions

Only 60 percent of trucks are reaching ports in Rosario today, Pablo Ferres, vice-president of the Argentine Private Commercial Ports Chamber, said in an interview. Ports near Rosario account for more than 60 percent of the country's grains exports.

Argentina is the world's second-largest corn exporter behind the U.S. and the third-largest soybean producer.

The lingering dispute over taxes may force farmers to plant less wheat when they begin sowing fields in the next two months, Miguens said.

Farmers are determined to demand repeal of the taxes and other measures because they are emboldened by the success of their 21-day strike, which became the biggest anti-government protest since 2001, Miguens said.

The demonstrations were ``so massive that it seems that they are going to take more notice of us,'' Miguens said. The farm groups will request measures to improve the farm industry, including the elimination of government price controls, and export restrictions and incentives for cattle ranchers, he said.

DeaconBenjamin  posted on  2008-04-05 10:26:25 ET  Reply   Untrace   Trace   Private Reply  


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