Friday, September 20, 2024
Perfil

ARGENTINA | Today 10:40

Pope Francis criticises Milei government’s policing of protests

Catholic leader voices criticism: “The government put its foot down and instead of paying for social justice, it paid for pepper spray, it was convenient for them,” he says of recent protests.

Pope Francis criticised President Javier Milei’s government on Friday, accusing it of preferring to use “pepper spray” against protesters than pay for “social justice.”

The Buenos Aires-born pontiff, who has traditionally refrained from intervening in Argentina’s domestic politics during his papacy, questioned the Milei administration’s response to recent protests during a global gathering of popular social movements at the Vatican. 

Francis, 87, criticised the policing of protests and the treatment of demonstrators, before pronouncing himself in favour of social justice. 

The remarks come after footage last week showed security forces using pepper spray on a ten-year-old girl who was with her parents at the protest.

“They made me watch a film of a [protest] repression from a week ago or a little less. Workers, people asking for their rights in the street, and the police were pushing them back with the most expensive thing there is: top quality pepper spray,” said the pontiff in comments reported by Noticias Argentinas.

“They had no right to demand their rights, because they were rioters, communists,” said the Pope.

“The government put its foot down: instead of paying for social justice, it paid for pepper spray, it was convenient for them. Keep that in mind,” he added.

Local media outlets reported that the comments were related to last week’s protests outside Congress over President Milei’s veto of a law to increase pensions for the retired. 

Security forces and police clashed with demonstrators outside the National Legislature, with tear gas and pepper spray used against protesters.

Since taking office last December, the Milei government has introduced an aggressive “anti-picket” protocol to police demonstrations. Introduced via the Security Ministry, led by Patricia Bullrich, the strict measures are designed to prevent street blockades.

“Look from afar, look from above, with indifference, with contempt, with hatred. This is how violence is born: the silence of indifference enables the roar of hatred,” said Francis.

“Silence in the face of injustice opens the way to social division, social division to verbal violence, verbal violence to physical violence, physical violence to the war of all against all,” declared the Catholic leader.

The Pope’s pronounced support for social justice clashes with Milei’s views, who has declared the concept “aberrant” in previous speeches. 

Argentina’s head of state has described social justice policies as “stealing from someone to give to someone else.”

Francis spoke before dozens of representatives from social movements across Latin America, Africa, Asia and Europe. 

A number of Argentine leaders were also present, including Alejandro Gramajo, trade union secretary of the UTEP workers movement, and former presidential hopeful Juan Grabois, the left-winger lawyer who challenged Sergio Massa for the Peronist coalition’s nomination before last year’s election.

In his speech, Francis called on those present to be the “guardians of social justice” and to “fight the criminal economy with the popular economy.”

The Pope went on express concern about "a perverse way of looking at reality, which exalts the accumulation of wealth as if it were a virtue."

"Blind competition for more and more money is not a creative force, but a sick attitude and a road to perdition. Such irresponsible, immoral and irrational behaviour is destroying creation and dividing people," he added.

The Argentine pontiff went on to warn against the advance of drug-trafficking, child prostitution, human-trafficking and gang violence in the low-income neighbourhoods, as well as organised crime and online gambling.

Criticising the excesses of capitalism and the unequal distribution of wealth it produces from a Christian perspective, Francis underscored the importance of temperance.

“They say that the system that allows rich people to amass fortunes, and allows ridiculous wealth to be aggregated, is immoral, that it should be notified, that there should be more taxes on billionaires,” said the pontiff.

"I recognise, of course, that entrepreneurs create jobs and contribute to economic prosperity. It is fair to say that. I said it in Singapore, looking at the magnificent forest of skyscrapers that testify to that contribution," he said.

"However, the fruits of economic prosperity are not well distributed. This is an obvious reality that, if left unchanged, will engender ever greater dangers," said the Pope.

 

– TIMES/NA
 

related news

Comments

More in (in spanish)