On the afternoon of April 11, the IMF's Anoop Singh,
head of the Special Operations Division, held a highly
unusual, and unperfected press conference in Buenos
Aires, to brutally threaten the Duhalde government.
Singh acted like an imperial overseer: the press conference
was organized by IMF spokesman Francisco Baker, who
flew in to Buenos Aires from Washington for 48 hours
solely for that purpose. It was held at the Finance
Ministry auditorium, but Finance Minister Remes Lenicov
and other officials didn't show their faces. It was
the IMF's show, in which Singh warned "it will
be very difficult, and decidedly painful for the population,
to try to correct the current situation without the
firm support of the international community. And,
for this, it is {essential} to have a program backed
by the IMF." [emphasis in original].
Singh then proceeded to read to reporters the conditional
ties which Argentina must accept. At the top of the
list was the demand that provincial governments eliminate
their deficit and stop printing local bonds; and that
the bankruptcy and economic subversion laws be altered
to favor foreign "investors." Responding
to questions about specific timeframes and amounts,
Singh would only say that "the timeframe and
the amount {will depend on how quickly a consistent
program is devised, and the Argentine economy recovers}."
This IMF hitman then echoed U.S. Treasury Secretary
Paul O'Neill, and his own IMF boss, Anne Krueger:
The IMF, of course, wants to "help." But,
"it is the [Duhalde] government, together with
the Argentine people, which must arrive at a consensus
on the type of economic reforms needed at this time,
and then carry them out." The responsibility
for finding a solution lies inside Argentina, not
abroad, he said. "Once a solid program is put
together, then financial assistance" will appear.
MORE ON ARGENTINA
CRISIS
April 11, 2002. [Source: Clarin, 11 April 2002. Buenos Aires] This material is distributed without profit to those who have expressed a prior interest in receiving this information for research and educational purposes.
|