It
is an irony that most world leaders do not practice
what they preach around the elections. The President
of El Salvador, Francisco Flores, of the rightist
Nationalist Republican Alliance (ARENA) is no exception.
On June 1, 1999, when he was sworn into the presidency,
the first promise he made to his strife torn, catastrophe
ravaged country was to provide more employment. "The
foremost and most urgent requirement of our government
is to promote jobs," However, the next few years
saw him embark on a path of privatization and trade
negotiations that would result in massive job cuts.
And this move was to affect with maximum impact, the
most basic and crucial of all sectors, health and
medical care. It also brought about the largest protests
in the recent history of El Salvador, protests that
were to continue over the next nine long months.
The recent upsurge in protests marked its beginning
in September, 2002 when healthcare workers and doctors
went on a strike to protest the closing down of the
main hospitals that run under the aegis of the Salvadoran
Institute of Social Security (ISSS), the institution
that is responsible for running the country's public
healthcare system which provides free healthcare and
social security coverage to all organized workers
in the country. The closure included the leading cancer
hospital of the country. The protests were started
by members of the hospital workers union (STISSS)
of the Salvadoran Institute of Social Security along
with the social security doctors union (SIMETRISSS)
from the public hospital system.
The move to close down public hospitals was a culmination
of government efforts to extend privatization and
opening up of the economy. Already major foreign private
investments, mainly by US companies, have taken place
in the sectors of electricity and telecommunications.
It is also widespread in the financial sector. Attempts
to privatize the health sector had been initiated
even earlier in 2000, but protests and strikes had
soon ended that process. This particular effort emerged
as a result of the proposals presented by the National
Association of Private Business (ANEP) during the
Second National Encounter of Private Businesses (ENADE).
The ANEP suggested these proposals ostensibly for
gearing the economy towards the so-called modernization
of healthcare services and the concession of auxiliary
services in medical facilities.
The keenness of the government to follow through with
these proposals reflected not only a rightist inclination
to agree with the Washington Consensus but also private
gains. ARENA's significant efforts to dismantle the
public sector, even in key areas, stem from a desire
to make El Salvador attractive to the foreign investors.
In the context of the coming Central American Free
Trade Agreement (CAFTA) negotiations, which in the
name of free trade, intends to open up even the public
sectors of the Central American economies to US investors,
the former has become imperative for the government.
Of course, it can simultaneously ensure future incomes
for itself. Ironically, the privatization process
has included private companies owned by the Minister
of Health though it is illegal for ministers of the
Salvadoran government to benefit from such contracts.
And this appears to be the rule rather than the exception.
The proposals by the ANEP, enthusiastically followed
through by the Flores Government, not only threatened
the employment conditions of healthcare workers but
also proposed a withdrawal of subsidized and cheap
healthcare facilities that were provided by the system.
The limited privatisation that had already taken place
in this sector in several hospital departments, food
and security services had seen costs rise substantially.
This therefore, was much bigger than an unemployment
issue; it affected the supply conditions of a crucial
service that in turn affected a large section of the
population. It threatened the average Salvadoran's
basic access to healthcare. These aspects were significantly
stressed by SIMETRISSS and STISSS.
The strike continued with more workers and doctors
joining each week and with larger areas of medical
facilities being included. On October 23rd, 2003,
the first white march (white - in solidarity with
hospital workers and doctors) was organized and led
by the STISSSS and SIMETRISSS. Estimates of protestors
varied from 8,000 to 200,000 but there was no doubt
that this march saw the transformation of the protests
into a larger social movement with people from all
walks of life joining in to defend their basic right
to public healthcare. Many organizations, starting
from those involved in the field of healthcare and
human rights to those representing rural populations
participated in the protest. Workers from other public
sectors like electricity, transport and water, the
other targets of privatization moves, joined in. STSEL,
the union of Electricity workers had also been staging
its own protests against the firing of its workers
since March 2002. University students, women's groups
and churches were also a major presence in this and
the following protests over the next eight months.
The protestors urged President Flores not to veto
a legislative bill recently introduced in the assembly
that entitled citizens to a State Guarantee of Health
and Social Security, which would prohibit "the
privatization, concession, purchase of services, subcontracting
or any form that is intended to transfer to private
entities the provision of services of public healthcare
and social security." The bill also stated that
the Salvadoran Institute of Social Security (ISSS)
and the hospital network and clinics of the Ministry
of Public Health and Social Assistance "will
be exclusively responsible for the provision of these
services."
The legislative measure was written and proposed by
the National Conciliation Party (PCN) in coordination
with representatives of the striking doctors' union.
The measure was approved in the assembly on October
17 with 49 votes, backed by the PCN and the Farabundo
Martí National Liberation Front (FMLN). President
Francisco Flores, however, announced on October 18
that he will veto the measure for "reasons of
unconstitutionality," and suggested that the
approval of the bill was part of pre-electoral campaign
strategies in anticipation of the elections scheduled
for March 2003. The legislative assembly needs 56
votes to override a presidential veto.
In his turn, President Flores came up with an alternative
plan on October 13 that rested on four main points:
a consistent fee, widened coverage, an integrated
healthcare plan, and freedom of choice. The proposed
integrated healthcare plan offered to freeze the fees,
increase the age limit of children to be covered under
a healthcare plan, and widen the service network to
include agricultural and domestic workers, independent
workers and Salvadorans living abroad. It also offered
to include many other facilities within the integrated
system.
However the crucial flaw remained. The new proposal
did not at all stop the invasion of privatization,
especially into key public sector units. This proposal
sought to make the ISSS nothing but a competition
for the private medical institutions and a likely
loser in the long run given the fact that it was sure
to face declining incomes and financial reserves.
The government was effectively proposing to transfer
the administration and provision of healthcare services
to private institutions. The attempt by the president
was simply to appease the people while continuing
with his agenda of privatization. This was acceptable
neither to the workers and doctors, nor to the different
social interest organizations represented in the protests.
Consequently, the President was forced to withdraw
the proposal from the Legislative Assembly on 31st
October.
After this the government did not show much initiative
in resolving the issue. However, a historic victory
was marked when the legislation proposed by the opposition
parties was passed on November 14th with the ruling
ARENA party being the only one opposing it. This effectively
overturned Flores' changes to the state guarantee
of health and social security and was an effective
validation of the STISSS and SIMETRISSS charter of
demands. The new law established as dominant legal
principle, the state's obligation to provide accessible
quality health care to every Salvadoran near their
homes, regardless of ability to pay. It also prohibited
the privatization, concession, subcontract, felicitation,
or transfer of any health care or support service
to private companies, and called for all current concessions
to be cancelled by the end of the year. However, this
legislation was later overturned on the 9th of December
by the back turn of the smaller right-wing party PCN,
allegedly paid off by ARENA.
Despite the offer of $1500, ten times the monthly
minimum wage, to every doctor who returned to work,
the strike and protests continued. The objective was
to rehabilitate fired workers and ensure the payment
of withheld salaries as well as a guarantee of no
reprisals against striking workers. Blocking bridges,
roads and major factories, the protestors used many
white marches and torchlight processions to voice
their anger.
Finally, after a nine month long journey which saw
all health workers being deprived of their salaries,
the firing of many, large scale police brutality unleashed
on strikers, and abeyance of all but the most necessary
of medical facilities, an end to the strike came on
June 13th, 2003. An official agreement was reached
between President Flores and the striking doctors
and workers. The agreement proposed to stall privatization
efforts involving the health sector, re-instate fired
workers and to let striking workers return to work
without fear of reprisal. Although the agreement did
not include a written promise by the government not
to privatize the ISSS, which the striking workers
had demanded, the freeze on hospital activity and
the massive protests had already forced the executive
to withdraw three draft laws it had submitted to Congress
that aimed at partial privatization of the ISSS.
It is true that healthcare in El Salvador is grossly
mismanaged, corrupt and in great need of an overhaul.
But privatization is not the only answer to the problem.
In fact in a country where more than 48% of the population
lives below the poverty line and can hardly afford
to spend on private healthcare, privatisation is not
at all an answer in a sector that provides a crucial
and basic service. And it is not that other kinds
of reform in this sector are not possible or have
not been considered in the past.
In March of 2000, in order to end a similar strike
by healthcare workers, President Flores had commissioned
a committee to create "the Proposal for Integral
Health Care Reform." This committee was made
up of representatives from the government, medical
unions, and the private sector and included international
healthcare experts. The end result was a proposal
which recommended sweeping reform, but argued for
maintaining the public healthcare system to be complemented
by some private services, when and where needed. However,
this proposal was never implemented nor was it made
the subject of public debate. After the recent agreement
on June 14th, it was agreed that this document would
provide the basis on which further reforms of the
health sector would be carried out.
CAFTA, Privatisation and Workers' Rights
However, issues of concern in the health sector are
by no means eliminated. The government gives indications
that it wants to crush the strong health care workers'
unions, such that possibilities for such protests
are eliminated in the future. It also helps to woo
the foreign investor to invest in public sector units.
Simultaneously the threat of private health insurance
companies and HMOs is by no means eliminated.
However, the main threat remains embodied in the CAFTA
or the Central American Free Trade Agreement that
President Bush proposed in January 2002, in preparation
for the Free Trade Area of the Americas (FTAA). Following
the lines of NAFTA, the North American Free Trade
Agreement, CAFTA is to be a union of the trading zones
of the US with that of Costa Rica, Guatemala, Honduras,
Nicaragua and El Salvador and is to be finalized by
the end of 2003.
The US already contributes more than 60% of El Salvador's
imports. The country has also been lowering its tariff
barriers in compliance with WTO rules. Therefore a
free market for goods has not been a problem for the
US. However, over 80% of all Salvadoran exports are
in intermediate or capital goods where tariffs have
been zero or negligible. Most of the reduced or near
zero subsidies have been in manufactured or bulk non-agricultural
goods. Agriculture has not been a major recipient
of US exports, a situation likely to change with the
signing of the CAFTA.
The agricultural sector in El Salvador supports a
huge 30% of the population of the country and small
farmers are numerous. The livelihood impact of signing
the CAFTA therefore would be severe. The country is
already devastated by El Nino catastrophe, and Negotiations
in CAFTA have in fact stalled over the issue of agricultural
products. The US demands full access for its agricultural
products, even while it uses bio-terrorism laws to
block Central American products from crossing the
Rio Grande. In the decade since NAFTA was signed,
such laws have prevented Mexico from exporting even
a single chicken to the US, while the Mexican chicken
industry have been decimated by a flood of cheap US
imports. The FMLN has warned that CAFTA would take
away import protections and other tools to reactivate
the agricultural sector that provides a living to
more than a million Salvadorans. Meanwhile, resistance
to CAFTA in the rural sector is growing, as more campesino
(farmer) organizations join into strategic alliances
with unions and other urban-sector organizations to
resist the free trade agreement.
Given the fact that El Salvador has no industry to
speak of, a destruction of its agriculture will force
even more migration out of the country. As much as
20% of all Salvadorans, work abroad. Most of them,
working mainly in the US, have no legal status and
therefore, possess none of the workers' rights they
should have. Many of them are forced to work under
pathetic conditions and accept wages much lower than
given to legal workers in these countries. There is
also the constant threat of deportation using which
many employers exploit such migrant workers. By destroying
the already vulnerable agriculture sector, the government
would increase the number of such forced migrants.
In fact, as suggested by some proposed amendments
to the healthcare programme, these migrant workers
need to be included in the healthcare scheme as they
are generally denied these benefits in the US. This
brings the discussion back to the realm of healthcare
- the scope of which needs to be expanded, rather
than contracted under the dictates of the CAFTA.
However, more than free trade in goods, the main interest
of the US lies in further liberalizing investment
opportunities. Since free trade agreements supercede
national law, a law against privatization such as
the contested "State Guarantee of Health and
Social Security," which seeks to protect the
people's right to affordable quality health care,
would likely be overturned by CAFTA's chapter on 'Freedom
of Investment.' Since CAFTA, as intendedd by the US,
will likely not distinguish between private and public
sector, no sector can be kept untouched from this
provision, however basic and supportive it may be
to the poor people of El Salvador. The privatisation
of electricity and its subsequent regionalisation,
are key components of the Plan Puebla Panama (PPP),
the infra-structural mega-project covering the entire
Central America and meant to facilitate trade between
these countries and the US. After electricity and
telecommunications, and now healthcare, privatisation
of water is the next target in El Salvador's government
policy.
Additionally, CAFTA will most likely contain the Chapter
11 investor rights provision of NAFTA. This would
allow foreign corporations to sue national governments
for laws or regulations that were shown to have caused
a loss in actual or even potential future profits.
A secret tribunal whose members would be unknown to
the public would hear such cases. Their rulings could
not be appealed and would overrule existing local,
state, and federal laws and international agreements
on labor and human rights. Such elements of CAFTA
would erode democracy and allow for decisions to be
made behind closed doors that would affect the lives
and well being of millions people.
Labour laws that govern basic rights of workers have
been a major area of concern regarding the CAFTA.
Human Rights groups have pointed out that these need
to be ensured pretty strictly under the CAFTA rules.
Other agreements such as NAFTA and the US-Jordan FTA
include provisions like minimum wages regulations,
certain basic conditions of work, compensation against
termination of work, right of association and right
to bargain collectively and to strike etc. The North
American Agreement on Labor Cooperation (NAALC), attached
to the North American Free Trade Agreement, was the
first 'labor side agreement' to accompany a trade
agreement. However, its effectiveness has been limited
partly due to the fact that it is a side agreement
and not subject to the same enforcement mechanisms
as the NAFTA. The CAFTA must include all these labour
rights as well as provisions for strict enforcement
of these rules. Noncompliance with labor standards
should carry the same consequences as any other violation
of the agreement. However, given the reality, it is
unlikely that labour standards will get a heavy weightage
in the deal.
El Salvador, it has been pointed out by many human
rights groups, provides few labour rights in reality.
Work conditions have been terrible, especially in
the Maquilas (assembling or processing plants in the
free trade zones), which produce largely for exports.
Abuses including child labor, unpaid and excessive
overtime work, wages below minimum legal requirements,
and grossly inadequate safety and hygiene standards
have been regularly reported. There have also been
severe restrictions on union activities. An estimated
eighty percent or more of the workers in this sector
are women, and many of them suffer sexual discrimination,
including pregnancy testing and firing of pregnant
workers. The fact that many of these are actually
owned and operated by US companies does not leave
much scope for hope vis-à-vis the CAFTA.
Ironically, while the El Salvador government has been
in a hurry to privatise public sector units (in compliance
with possible CAFTA provisions), it has not attempted
to properly implement any of these labour rights.
Right to form unions is a basic right for workers,
recognised by many other agreements such as the proposed
CAFTA. It is also recognised by the Salvadoran labour
code itself. The Labour code specifically provides
for 'the Right of Association' and the 'Right to organise
and Bargain Collectively'. However, the government
seems to be moving in the exactly opposite direction.
Police repression of workers has recently reached
peak levels.
The resentment towards CAFTA is further fuelled by
the fact that until now the negotiations are being
conducted in secrecy and have not included any civil
society groups. The fears of getting a raw deal is
also heightened since the negotiating teams of the
Central American countries are hopelessly ill equipped
to counter the expert negotiating teams of the US.
Conclusion
While the people have come out victorious, if at least
temporarily, the main victim of the strike has been
the governing National Republican Alliance (ARENA),
as demonstrated by the outcome of the March legislative
and municipal elections. The seats held by the right-wing
ARENA in the 84-member single-chamber Congress shrunk
from 29 to 27, and the party lost its ability to form
alliances that gave it an absolute majority. On the
other hand, the leftist Farabundo Marti National Liberation
Front (FMLN), which publicly supported the strike
from the start, has 31 seats now, compared to 25 prior
to the March elections, and is the poll favorite with
a view to the 2004 presidential elections.
The fight against privatization in El Salvador does
not stop here. The social movement that was triggered
off by the long and determined strike of the healthcare
workers has shown that these are not exercises in
futility. Many other countries, including the US,
have faced severe opposition to privatization of key
public services, most notably in health. The Central
American countries like Nicaragua, Guatemala are all
facing massive protests against privatization threats
posed by CAFTA. The protests are not only against
privatization, they are also against a CAFTA that
gives them disadvantages rather than advantages. But
Salvadorans have taken protests to a greater level.
By going without hospital facilities but still continuing
to widely support the strike over nine long months,
they have carried awareness of issues such as privatization
and trade reforms to new heights and created a mass
movement much broader and deeper in scope than merely
a strike of workers within one sector. Both the number
of protestors in the marches as well as opinion polls
has shown the extensiveness of the support among Salvadorans.
Statistics provided by the UCA (Central American University
ran by the Jesuits) showed that 89% of Salvadoran's
are against the privatization of health care and 70%
supported the healthcare workers strike.
Considering that El Salvador has been the "good
boy" under ARENA's leadership – it has
been privatizing its financial and industrial sectors
with eager zeal, servicing its debt, and has also
been diligently reducing its tariff barriers under
the WTO regulations - the force of the protests against
policies pursued by its government comes as an even
bigger surprise and more of a blow for powers like
the US. ARENA's dismal showing in the recent elections
also prove that no government can afford to take their
peoples' opinion for granted nor can imperialist powers
expect meek governments to agree to their dictates
and remain in power at the same time. For that the
policies of extensive privatization and opening up
must show direct and obvious benefits which, from
the world-wide experience, they have failed to do.
Finally, the fact that the healthcare workers in El
Salvador, despite their appeasement by the government,
very much intend to be part of all future programmes
like campaigns against the privatization of water,
does indeed point to the fact that the social movement
in El Salvador has touched a level that goes beyond
narrow selfish interests. And it is here that the
strength of the movement lies.
August 13, 2003.
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