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Arab Revolt Spreads To Europe? Portuguese Protest Poor Government. - Foreign Affairs - Nairaland

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Arab Revolt Spreads To Europe? Portuguese Protest Poor Government. by PhysicsMHD(m): 6:17am On Mar 23, 2011
Portugal protests: Revolt of the Generations

March 12, 2011

Portuguese society took to the streets in eleven cities on Saturday afternoon. Hundreds of thousands of people of all ages and political leanings came together to send a clear message to Portugal's political class to start implementing policies which create a future for the country's youth. How many all over Europe are feeling the same frustration?

300,000 people (at least) filled Lisbon's central Avenida da Liberdade (Freedom Avenue) shouting slogans such as "Thieves out!", "Portugal! Portugal! Portugal!", "With a precarious situation, no freedom!", "Sócrates resign!" In Oporto, the Praça da Batalha was packed full, a situation repeated up and down the country.

The main characteristic of today's demonstration was that it was organised for the country's youth by the country's youth, a great deal of work having been done by voluntary civil society organizations using social networks; another feature was that those who took part were not only young people - there were demonstrators from all walks of life, all generations and all political persuasions, from the far left to the far right. They came together to tell the Government of José Sócrates: Enough!

Yet it is not only the present Portuguese government (Socialist, in name only) which is at stake - it is all the governments since the Portuguese Revolution of 1974, which have failed utterly and totally to create a model which caters for the interests of Portuguese society.


Successive governments from the same three parties (PSD - Social Democrats; CDS-PP, Christian Democrats/Conservatives; PS - Socialist Party, currently an insult to the word Socialism) have since 1974 - for nearly four decades, wholly failed the people who elected them. One of the slogans chanted today was "President, dissolve Parliament!" Yet the strange thing in Portugal is that the people carry on electing the same Parties, maybe following the premise that if you drop water on a stone, eventually it will drill a hole.

While it is said that every people has the Government it deserves, the Portuguese people are right. The education system does its job, and very well - Portuguese students compare extremely favourably with their peers in the Erasmus Programme and the Portuguese education system has been ranked among the best in Europe. This is clear to see for those who work in Portuguese Universities.

What the Governments of these political parties have done is to destroy Portuguese industry, destroy Portuguese agriculture, destroy Portuguese fisheries and what have they created in return?

A situation in which most retired persons receive miserable pensions after a working life, a situation in which supermarket prices are equal to or higher than many richer countries, a situation in which it is practically impossible for a young person to buy a house, unless s/he has substantial savings (and how?), a situation in which a whole generation has been thrown into a collective garbage dump of professional hopelessness: the Generation of 1,000 Euros in Europe; the Generation of 500 Euros in Portugal, for the few who manage to get a job - normally in a call center.

The precarious situation in which the Portuguese youth finds itself - studying hard for years to what end? - and then in many cases working not as a full-time, fully-integrated employee but either part-time or working as a temporary or external worker, means people are unable to formulate plans for buying a car, getting credit for a house and starting a family. They are unable to start a life.

The alternative is to go abroad. Therefore it is no surprise that the anger felt by Portugal's generation of tomorrow exploded in demonstration - an orderly one - against politicians whose collective ineptitude and absurdity was summed up by the ridiculous speech from the Portuguese President Silva, who favours a liberal approach to the economy (an approach which was totally and wholly defeated in the recent economic and financial crisis) and who mentioned the importance of the family as the pillar of tomorrow's society (how? if his PSD Party has played an equal part in the failure to create a future - and his personal responsibility in the abysmal management of European Funds after Portugal's adhesion must not be forgotten - he was Prime Minister for a decade just after Portugal joined the European Community).

For the few that do manage to land a job (these days mainly those with contacts), they will find a working environment where they are supposed to work 35 to 40 hours a week like the rest of the Europeans but in fact are expected to work far longer, well outside the timetable stipulated when they signed their contract. Let us see (verbatim) how the interview works,

This happened during the past week in an office in Lisbon. A young mother went for a job interview, which started as follows: "Ah, you've got kids, eh? Well then, you don't want to work here, we start at eight and finish at the earliest at nine p.m., usually far longer, Saturdays, Sundays, nights, ".

How many interviews start like that, with the expression "this is a work post, not a job"? And that, for 500 Euros, a lifetime of sacrifice, an abominable standard of living fraught with dramas and difficulties, successive governments asking for more sacrifices and falling further and further behind the rest of Europe, low salaries and high prices and then a miserable retirement pension?

It is no wonder the Portuguese took to the streets. However, you can bet that in the next election, they will once again vote for a government led by the PSD or PS. Talk about obtuse,


Timothy Bancroft-Hinchey

Director and Chief Editor
Re: Arab Revolt Spreads To Europe? Portuguese Protest Poor Government. by PhysicsMHD(m): 6:17am On Mar 23, 2011
Re: Arab Revolt Spreads To Europe? Portuguese Protest Poor Government. by snowdrops(m): 10:55am On Mar 23, 2011
so this is now a world revolution and no longer restricted to the arabs alone
Re: Arab Revolt Spreads To Europe? Portuguese Protest Poor Government. by Sunofgod(m): 12:03pm On Mar 23, 2011
'London Will Burn On Saturday'

[flash=400,400]
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=X6Z25ZWZmJQ[/flash]
Re: Arab Revolt Spreads To Europe? Portuguese Protest Poor Government. by kodewrita(m): 12:49pm On Mar 23, 2011
Until I see Mugabe being flogged publicly and Museveni doing frog jumps, it is not global.
Re: Arab Revolt Spreads To Europe? Portuguese Protest Poor Government. by snowdrops(m): 4:01pm On Mar 23, 2011
kodewrita:

Until I see Mugabe being flogged publicly and Museveni doing frog jumps, it is not global.
thats the day "foul go grow teeth" wink
Re: Arab Revolt Spreads To Europe? Portuguese Protest Poor Government. by Jen33(m): 4:03pm On Mar 23, 2011
^^^ Mugabe is an African HERO. He refused to sell his country out to the west, suffered economic sanctions as a result, but has now broken the sanctions and the country is back on track, WITH THE LAND NOW IN THE POSSESSION OF ITS RIGHTFUL OWNERS.
Re: Arab Revolt Spreads To Europe? Portuguese Protest Poor Government. by snowdrops(m): 4:16pm On Mar 23, 2011
How can a so called African hero turn on his own people, starve them, intimidate and kill them. Blaming the west for his wickedness is plain cowardice and self denial.
Re: Arab Revolt Spreads To Europe? Portuguese Protest Poor Government. by kodewrita(m): 4:42pm On Mar 23, 2011
Jen33:

^^^ Mugabe is an African HERO. He refused to sell his country out to the west, suffered economic sanctions as a result, but has now broken the sanctions and the country is back on track, WITH THE LAND NOW IN THE POSSESSION OF ITS RIGHTFUL OWNERS.

lets not argue. take the following for reference.

http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Zimbabwean_Fifth_Brigade

http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Hyperinflation_in_Zimbabwe

He was never a good guy contrary to popular misconception:
http://www.politicsweb.co.za/politicsweb/view/politicsweb/en/page71656?oid=89244&sn=Detail&pid=71656

For a comprehensive description of his destruction of his country:
http://www.theatlantic.com/magazine/archive/2003/12/how-to-kill-a-country/2845/#

just a preview


Gukurahundi refers to the seasonal Zimbabwean rains that wipe out the debris of the previous year's crop. It signifies a purging of the old, a purification. In January of 1983 Robert Mugabe, a member of the ethnic Shona majority, ordered his North Korea-trained Fifth Brigade to carry out what he called a gukurahundi against the Ndebele people. The Ndebele account for about a fourth of the country's population, and Mugabe felt that they threatened him because his chief political rival at the time, Joshua Nkomo, was a Ndebele. The Nazis gave us the Final Solution; the Serbs gave us "ethnic cleansing"; the Zimbabweans have given us "wiping away."

Public discussion of the gukurahundi is forbidden in Zimbabwe. But George Mkwananzi, thirty-three, is the self-anointed keeper of Ndebele memory. Wearing thick spectacles that keep sliding down his nose, he doesn't fit the image of a would-be rebel leader. But that is what he says he and others will become if Mugabe is not punished for the murder of the Ndebele. "In the whole history of this country nobody ever caused such a loss of life, not even Cecil John Rhodes," Mkwananzi says. Rhodes's conquest left some 5,000 Ndebele dead. Mugabe's forces are thought to have killed 25,000. "When liberation was achieved, we never experienced it as a region," Mkwananzi says. "We were merely transferred from British colonialism to Shona colonialism. If Mugabe and his henchmen are not prosecuted, we will break away and create our own country, and we will find a way to make revenge against Mugabe. It will happen. It may sound like a dream, but ours is a brutalized past that has to be revisited. Five or ten years from now they will say, 'What that man was saying was true.'"

In an era of international justice, dictators with blood on their hands are afraid that if they relinquish power, they will end up prosecuted, like Slobodan Milosevic, or humiliated, like Augusto Pinochet. Mugabe knows that his massacres have been carefully documented by survivors and human-rights investigators, and he is right to be nervous. Tsvangirai, for his part, might be willing to accept a deal in which Mugabe was given a golden parachute to Nigeria (as Charles Taylor, of Liberia, was), but he knows that if he does so, his many Ndebele supporters may revolt. "I cannot stand up now and say, 'We will forgive Mugabe,' because I will be dead," Tsvangirai told me. "But neither can I say, 'We are going to send you to the Hague,' because he will say, 'Let me burn down the building.'"


Re: Arab Revolt Spreads To Europe? Portuguese Protest Poor Government. by shotster50(m): 3:17am On Mar 24, 2011
Going by the popular logic, this revolt in Portugal makes no sense because they dont have oil grin grin grin grin
Re: Arab Revolt Spreads To Europe? Portuguese Protest Poor Government. by EzeUche2(m): 4:22am On Mar 24, 2011
Now we know Africa cannot have revolutions. There will be coups, civil wars or sectarian strife, because our nations are not homogeneous.

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