Uruguay: Workers strike against proposed pension reform to raise retirement age

March 29, 2023
Issue 
Uruguay protest against pension reforms
Protesting the attacks on pensions and retirement in Uruguay's capital, Montevideo. Photo: pitcnt.uy

Workers and unions led strikes in Uruguay, on March 23, against the right-wing Luis Lacalle Pou government鈥檚 proposed pension reforms, which include raising the retirement age from 60 to 65.

Thousands flooded the streets of the capital Montevideo, marching from the country鈥檚 oldest public university to the Legislative Palace.

The strikes were called by the Inter-Union Plenary of Workers 鈥 National Convention of Workers (PIT-CNT) 鈥 the national trade union federation 鈥 and joined by workers in the banking, education, healthcare, housing and transport industry from public and private sectors.

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Uruguayans protesting against pension reforms
Uruguayans protesting against pension reforms. Photo: pitcnt.uy

PIT-CNT Executive Secretariat member Enrique M茅ndez, in his outside the Legislative Palace, condemned the pension reforms as 鈥渁 bastion to continue hitting the most vulnerable sectors of our society鈥.

M茅ndez criticised the latest 鈥渂rutal and criminal鈥 reform and highlighted the importance of social security to the working class.

鈥淸Social security] is a struggle that the masses led in the face of injustice, in the face of the unfair, unequal conditions of the market economy whose leitmotif, pure and simple, is to seek indiscriminate profit without thinking about social vulnerabilities.鈥

M茅ndez called on the government to abandon the bill and warned that workers will continue mobilising against the reform. The bill passed the country鈥檚 senate last December and is currently due to be voted on in the Chamber of Representatives.

[麻豆传媒 acknowledges in the making of this article, which provides news overlooked by mainstream Western media.]

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