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Interim president quits in Argentina

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Published: Dec. 31, 2001 at 1:42 PM
By JOSHUA DYLAN MELLARS
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BUENOS AIRES, Dec. 31 (UPI) -- Argentina struggled to pull out of a political and economic tailspin on Monday after the country's interim president resigned due to lack of political support following the latest round of violent protests against the government.

The country's politicians grappled to reach consensus on how the country would fill a power vacuum after two presidents resigned in just more than a week's time in the midst of a deepening economic crisis.

Interim President Adolfo Rodriguez Saa announced his resignation on Sunday a little over a week after president Fernando de la Rua quit following civil unrest that left nearly 30 dead, which was directed at austerity measures.

Argentina's people have shown they are ready to take to the streets in protest again: expressing a growing lack of confidence in the country's political class and anger over the government's failure to turn around a 4-year recession in which unemployment has risen to 18 percent.

The next leader will find the country's economy in dire straits. Upon taking office, Rodriguez Saa announced the government's intention to suspend payments on the foreign part of its $132 billion debt, and several leading politicians are now saying that the government cannot afford to pay its domestic debt either.

A special joint session of both Congressional chambers was to be called on Tuesday in order to accept the resignation of Rodriguez Saa and define a course of action.

Head of the lower house, Eduardo Camano, was set to lead the country until a new president could be selected during the special Congressional session. Senate head Ramon Puerta who had been next in line to succeed Rodriguez Saa, and had temporarily taken the country's reigns after de la Rua's resignation, refused to take over again, ceding power to Camano on Sunday.

There is debate among leading politicians over whether the country's Congress should appoint a new president, who would stay in power until de la Rua's term comes to an end in 2003, or whether to call new elections.

"Some are thinking that it would be most convenient to have a president until 2003," said Camano in a television interview on Monday. Under such a plan, the Congress would nominate the president who would design a "national unity" government with broad support from the country's political parties, he said.

Consensus across the country's political spectrum on a program to re-start the country's economy is necessary to stop a "war of (Argentina's) people against one another," he said.

However, some others believed elections were necessary to give a new government enough of a mandate to effectively rule.

"I continue defending the right of Argentines to elect their authorities," said leading Peronist governor Manuel de la Sota in a television interview on Monday.

The plan to appoint a president to govern with the support of a broad-based government appeared to be gaining support, said analysts.

Peronist Sen. Eduardo Duhalde, who ran for president in 1999 against de la Rua and served as vice president under former President Carlos Menem, was being approached as a possible candidate to lead a broad based government, said analysts.

The Peronist dominated Congress had previously appointed Rodriguez Saa interim president until elections could be called on March 3 to select a president who would rule until 2003. The Peronist party, founded by populist leader Juan Peron during the 1940's, took the political stage again after de la Rua, a member of the main opposition Radical Party, resigned.

Menem, a Peronist, had put forward market reforms during the 1990's, but some analysts believe a flawed reform framework and alleged corruption within the administration contributed to bring about the country's current economic problems.

The Peronists are greatly divided at present. Infighting and rivalries among Peronist party members came to a head when Peronist Rodriguez Saa said that he would resign on Sunday after key Peronist governors failed to give him the backing necessary to govern.

Many Argentines have lost confidence in the country's political leaders seeing many politicians as corrupt and too preoccupied with personal ambitions to effectively deal with the country's problems.

Many protesters who took to the streets last Friday evening and early Saturday were unhappy with Rodriguez Saa's choice of Cabinet ministers, many of whom were believed to be tainted by corruption scandals.

There were increased security forces around the country's Congress building and presidential palace, the Pink House as well as other locations around the capital, Buenos Aires, on Monday. The Congress and presidential palace were the principal sites where protestors battled against riot police during the unrest that led to the resignation of both de la Rua and Rodriguez Saa.

Argentines banged pots in protest in San Luis province on Monday where Rodriguez Saa had been governor for 18 years before being appointed president.

The political crisis creates more uncertainty as to how the country will deal with its economic problems.

The resignation of Saa appears to be the death of a planned third currency, the argentino, he had announced to create more liquidity and pay bills. Argentina's currency, the peso, is currently pegged at a one to one parity with the dollar as part of a program implemented under Menem to counter inflation.

Many feared the new currency, the argentino, would mean an imminent devaluation and a return to the country's past inflationary tendencies.

Argentines lined up at banks on Monday to take out as much cash as possible under banking restrictions that were put in place by de la Rua's administration, which set a $1,000 a month limit on withdrawals.

The measures were put in place to stop a run on banks that drained billions from the system, and threatened to wreak more economic havoc. But the measures have also been one of the main policies Argentines have gone on the streets to protest, worried they will lose their savings. The new government will have to find a way to loosen the restrictions while staving off further financial disaster, said analysts.

"If things keep going like this the military will come back," said Paolo Mendez, a hot dog vendor who works near the presidential palace. "These politicians never learn."

Argentina's democracy is 18 years old, re-installed after a brutal military dictatorship in the 1970's and early 1980's. The military's role in the country was greatly diminished during Menem's administration, however.

© 2001 United Press International, Inc. All Rights Reserved. Any reproduction, republication, redistribution and/or modification of any UPI content is expressly prohibited without UPI's prior written consent.

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