logo
Strikes, roadblocks bring Panama to near standstill

Strikes, roadblocks bring Panama to near standstill

Yahoo2 days ago

ASUNCIÓN, Paraguay, June 3 (UPI) -- Panama is facing one of its most intense social crises since the return to democracy in 1989, with nearly 40 days of nationwide protests, strikes and roadblocks sparked by a controversial pension reform law approved by President José Raúl Mulino's administration.
The protests escalated April 23, when the national teachers' union launched an indefinite strike. Construction workers and banana industry laborers soon joined, expanding the demonstrations nationwide.
Mulino has taken a hard stance, referring to some unions as "mafias" and insisting he will not repeal the pension law, which he says is necessary to preserve the system's financial sustainability.
On Monday, Mulino sent a delegation of seven cabinet ministers to Bocas del Toro province, the center of the protests, and offered to draft a bill restoring labor benefits for banana workers, provided the roadblocks are lifted.
"The minute they permanently lift the strikes, that law goes to the Assembly," he said.
The proposal had little effect. Banana workers and other protest groups responded by intensifying demonstrations.
Protesters are demanding the repeal of the law, which raises the retirement age, increases worker contributions and separates new individual accounts from the collective pension fund.
They also oppose a security cooperation agreement with the United States that allows the use of former military bases in Panama and the possible reopening of the Cobre Panamá copper mine -- shut in 2023 after being declared unconstitutional. Such a potential reopening has reignited environmental and social protests.
U.S.-based Chiquita Brands has emerged at the center of the crisis. The company announced it would shut its banana operations in Changuinola, a key production hub in the Caribbean province of Bocas del Toro near the Costa Rica border.
A few days ago, after a full work stoppage by employees protesting the new pension law, Chiquita Panama and Ilara Holding fired 4,900 workers for job abandonment and said the company had lost more than $75 million, with irreversible damage to banana production.
Panama's Labor Minister Jackeline Muñoz said the company plans to lay off its remaining workers this week.
"They are filing a request to terminate more than 1,600 workers. There won't be a single employee left on the company's payroll," she said.
In 2024, Panama's Social Security Fund, which operates under a solidarity-based model, reported a deficit of nearly $900 million, placing a significant burden on the system.
The situation has worsened due to a decline in active contributors, as new workers are entering a mixed system with individual retirement accounts.

Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

EU Court of Justice official says Hungary LGBTQ content ban violates EU law
EU Court of Justice official says Hungary LGBTQ content ban violates EU law

Miami Herald

time37 minutes ago

  • Miami Herald

EU Court of Justice official says Hungary LGBTQ content ban violates EU law

June 5 (UPI) -- A legal scholar at the European Union's top court on Thursday said that Hungary's law limiting access to LGBTQ content in schools and on television violates EU law. Tamara Capeta, advocate general of the Court of Justice of the European Union, said in a nonbinding opinion that Hungary's Law LXXIX that Hungary failed to provide proof that barring content that portrays the ordinary lives of the LGBTQ community impacts the development of minors in its defense of the law. "Consequently, those amendments are based on a value judgment that homosexual and non-cisgender life is not of equal value or status as heterosexual and cisgneder life," Capeta said. Capeta said Hungary disregarded articles of the EU's Charter of Fundamental Rights that refer to "the prohibition of discrimination on grounds of sex and sexual orientation, the respect for private and family life, the freedom of expression and information," and the "right to human dignity." According to Capeta, the Hungarian law cannot be justified as it allegedly interferes with the healthy development of minors and parents' rights to raise their children as they personally choose under the guise that it protects minors from pornographic content. Passed in 2021, it, among its amendments, prohibits minors from having any access to content that promotes or shows gender identities that don't correspond to the sex assigned at birth, sex reassignment or homosexuality. The EU had already brought an infringement action against Hungary in regard to Law LXXIX in December of 2022, but then Hungary further stirred the EU over LGBTQ rights in recent months when it passed a ban on Pride events in March, and again in April when its parliament amended its constitution to ban public LGBTQ gatherings, in what it has said defends children's rights. Copyright 2025 UPI News Corporation. All Rights Reserved.

Russian ‘retaliatory' airstrikes across Ukraine kill 5, injure 28
Russian ‘retaliatory' airstrikes across Ukraine kill 5, injure 28

Miami Herald

time38 minutes ago

  • Miami Herald

Russian ‘retaliatory' airstrikes across Ukraine kill 5, injure 28

June 5 (UPI) -- At least five people were killed, including a child, and 28 injured after Russian forces launched more than 100 drones, guided bombs and missiles against seven Ukrainian regions overnight. All of the fatalities occured in the northern city of Pryluky, a city of 51,500 people 90 miles east of Kyiv, where attack drones set residential areas on fire and razed houses, according to the the State Emergency Service. Ukrainian Interior Minister Ihor Klymenko said three of those killed were the wife, daughter and 1-year-old grandson of Pryluky's fire chief whose home was struck as he was out directing the emergency response to the attack. "The rescuer who had just responded to the Russian strike with his team, lost them all, said Klymenko. Viacheslav Chaus, governor of the Chernihiv region, confirmed that a 1-year-old child and two women were among five people confirmed killed in the attack, with six of the injured hospitalized. "Police, rescuers, and other emergency services are working at the sites of enemy strikes," he said. In the east, four children were among at least 17 people injured in Kharkiv, Ukraine's second largest city, in a combined drone and missile strike targeting residential districts in the south of the city. Two men were injured in the southern city of Kherson after four Russian guided bombs struck the central business district, causing extensive damage, with the administrative headquarters for the region almost completely destroyed, Gov. Oleksandr Prokudin said in an update on social media. The airstrike also badly damaged a nearby apartment building, he added. Emergency services in Odessa in the southwest of the country said that a medical facility, a children's center and a high school were destroyed after the region came under attack from Russian drones. Noting that the one-year-old boy killed in Pryluky was the 632nd Ukrainian child killed in since Russia's full-scale invasion, President Volodymyr Zelensky said Donetsk, Odessa, Sumy and Dnipro provinces had also come under attack. "This is another massive strike by terrorists -- Russian terrorists -- who kill our people every night," Zelensky said in a post on X, adding that it demonstrated the need for "maximum sanctions," from Ukraine's Western allies. "Russia is constantly trying to buy time for itself to continue the killings. When it does not feel strong enough condemnation and pressure from the world, it kills again. We expect action from the United States, Europe, everyone in the world who can really help change these terrible circumstances. "Strength matters, and the war can only be ended through strength. We need to put pressure on Moscow with all available tools and step by step deprive it of the ability to continue this aggression," wrote Zelensky. The airborne assault from Russia came hours after U.S. President Trump said Russian President Vladimir Putin had told him during a phone conversation Wednesday he would have to retaliate over Ukrainian attacks at weekend targeting Russian aircraft on the ground at airfields deep inside its territory. Copyright 2025 UPI News Corporation. All Rights Reserved.

Germany's Friedrich Merz to meet with Donald Trump in Oval Office
Germany's Friedrich Merz to meet with Donald Trump in Oval Office

Yahoo

timean hour ago

  • Yahoo

Germany's Friedrich Merz to meet with Donald Trump in Oval Office

June 5 (UPI) -- German Chancellor Friedrich Merz will be in Washington Thursday to meet with President Donald Trump in person for the first time. Merz said that he was looking forward to his first face-to-face meeting with Trump after the two have previously spoken over the phone "Our alliance with America was, is, and remains of paramount importance for the security, freedom, and prosperity of Europe. The United States is an indispensable friend and partner of Germany," Merz posted to X Wednesday. The topics of discussion are expected to range from tariffs and trade to Russia's war on Ukraine and the state of the Middle East. Trump and Merz reportedly speak with each other on a first-name basis, however, in a speech given Tuesday, German Foreign Minister Johann Wadephul described the current tone of German-U.S. relations as being "as rough as it has not been in a long time." Trump has also levied tariffs on all member nations of the European Union, Germany included, that will impose a 50% duty on all European goods starting July 9, a deadline that was extended from June 1 to allow more time for trade negotiations. The Trump administration has also upped tariffs on all aluminum and steel imports from 25% to 50%, with only Britain excluded. Germany announced last week it will provide a nearly $5.7 billion military aid package to Ukraine that will finance long-range weapons to be produced by Ukraine, which Merz announced can be deployed by the Ukrainian military for use inside the borders of Russia. Trump, however, had ordered a pause on military aid to Ukraine in March shortly after his combative February meeting with Zelensky. It is unclear if Trump has any issue with Germany's aid for or relationship with Ukraine.

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

Ready to dive into the world of global news and events? Download our app today from your preferred app store and start exploring.
app-storeplay-store