Protests Grow in “Europe’s Next Greece”
by:
Ryan Harvey, Even If Your Voice Shakes
| Op-Ed
Hundreds “Occupy Dublin” as Wall Street tactic spreads.
“What are you protesting against?” asks a man walking home from the pub last night. “Is this about the IMF?”
When I answer that yes, this is about the IMF, he gets excited. “Fuck
the IMF,” he says as he starts to walk further into the crowd. For
another hour, he enters conversations with various people at the camp
site set up in front of the Central Bank of Ireland the day before after
an internet call went out to “Occupy Dublin.”
The International Monetary Fund (IMF) is hated in Ireland for their
role last year in a major round of austerity measures that cut social
services while bailing out Irish banks with over €85 billion. “The State
has sold itself completely to the financial cartels,” a 42 year-old
unemployed construction worker tells me. “They are transferring more
wealth out of Ireland than British landlords ever did, and these are
Irish people doing it!”
With this anger, it is no surprise that the protest-camp, inspired by a
similar camp outside of Wall Street, is quite popular here. A
consistent stream of passersby and people who have heard about the camp
on the news are stopping by day and night to lend support, talk
politics, share stories, or find out how they can help.
Most people here heard via Facebook about the call for the camp and
responded quickly. A man who helped put out the call says it is extra
exciting because the camp is breaking with the media image of an Ireland
that doesn’t protest or raise a fuss about the recession. “When I saw
the videos from Wall Street,” he says, “I thought, ‘finally, people are
waking up!’”
Many of those interviewed believe that this will not be ending anytime
soon. “This is going to be a long thing,” Ashman says of the camp,
adding that he and many others are willing to risk arrest to hold the
space.
“We have to resist,” the unemployed construction worker mentioned
earlier tells me. “Resistance means that power understands that there
are consequences for their actions.”
“Europe’s Next Greece”
Along with the recent IMF takeover of major areas of Ireland’s economy
and a major sell-off of natural resources in the energy sector to
multinationals, the situation here has also been exacerbated by a
decade-long “building bubble” that recently burst.
“The Dublin you are looking at today is not the Dublin of ten years
ago,” says a man in his early 30s who has stopped by the encampment. He
points out that a large amount of development projects, backed by Irish
banks and pushed by EU economic concepts, remain empty years after
development. From office parks to condominiums, these projects helped
push Ireland into the debt crisis it has now entered.
A 17 year old secondary school student chimes in. “They were giving
people loans for things that they knew they couldn’t afford,” he says.
“Everyone saw it coming… It was just a matter of time.”
With this crisis emerging, former IMF chief economic Simon Johnson
dubbed Ireland “Europe’s Next Greece” as he advocated last year for the
government to “convert the liabilities of private banks into debts of
the sovereign,” or in other words, to make the people pay for the
crisis.
“That’s the main issue when we’re talking about housing Ireland,” a 22
year-old participant of the camp tells me. “Basically, tax-payers are
now paying for all these empty buildings, so the banks can have money.”
She blames large property owners and banks for colluding to make large
profits on risky business, and then coming to the government to bail
them out.
Like the subprime loan crisis the precipitated the recession in the
U.S., risky investments by banks looking for “expanding” markets almost
brought the whole economy down after the reality hit them that these
loans would not be paid back. So, like in the U.S., they looked to the
state for help, who then went into the pockets of tax-payers to
subsidize their adventurous partners.
“They have socialized the debt of the bankers onto the people,” a
participant at the camp tells me. “The people are angry… There is a
significant anger at the situation that has not yet manifested, and the
government knows this.”
Another area facing cuts has been the healthcare sector. 26 year-old
Ashman, from Limerick, originally came to the encampment to lend his
support but ended up joining it. He tells me in calm anger how the IMF
situation has led to the closing of emergency units in hospitals
surrounding Limerick, in which many of his relatives work. Now, he says,
people may have to travel up to an hour to receive emergency care.
“And on top of that, the government has turned around and taken the
retirement money of people like my family, who have paid taxes their
whole lives.” In fact, the Irish state agreed with the IMF to loot the
pension funds of public workers to help pay the IMF back for their loan.
“They gave the pensions of these hard-working people to the banks,”
Ashman says.
One of the organizations backing the Occupy Dublin call is the Enough
Campaign has called for a referendum on the austerity measures, a move
that was defeated by the government last year. They point out that in
Iceland, a similar referendum exposed the reality of the public’s
position on austerity for the people and bail-outs for the banks; “Last
year the people of Iceland demanded the right to have a referendum on
their IMF deal and in March 2010 a massive 93 percent of the people
rejected the deal,” their website reads. “There is an overwhelming
democratic case for putting an agreement with such profound implications
for the economic and social future our country to a referendum of the
people.
In a sense, what the sub-prime loan sharks did is what the IMF and its
partner organization the World Bank have done consistently throughout
the world; large-scale lending for infrastructural projects in the name
of “economic development” that have more than often failed to bring
about the economic changes promised. The result is further debt-burden,
followed by IMF-introduced austerity measures to reallocate public money
to paying the debt back.
Now that same tactic is turning around on Ireland and many other
European countries. “The American dream has become the Irish nightmare,”
an unemployed former IT manager tells me, “or rather, the global
nightmare.”
Only two days into it, one can see that if this protests gains
momentum, it could create a very big political situation for the Irish
state.
No comments:
Post a Comment