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Argentina declares drought crisis

03.02.2009 

Argentina has declared an agricultural emergency as it confronts one of the worst droughts in decades.

President Cristina Fernandez said the decree would defer tax payments for thousands of farmers for a year.

Farmers' leaders had been calling for action to tackle the drought, which is estimated to have caused losses of at least $4bn (£2.8bn).

Argentina is one of the world's biggest producers of soya, grains and beef but has been hit by falling demand.

Several regions of Argentina, including the provinces of Buenos Aires, Cordoba, La Pampa and Entre Rios, have been hit by the worst drought since at least 1971, according to the country's national weather service.

Since March last year, rainfall has been significantly below normal. Among the effects, some 800,000 head of cattle have been lost, while in Entre Rios some 90% of the wheat crop has been ruined.

Strained ties

The worst affected area is the Pampas region, where winds have been whipping up the dry soil and coating huge swathes of barren land.

ARGENTINA'S DROUGHT
map

Under the emergency measures, producers who have lost at least half of their harvest or herd will be exempt from paying most taxes for a year.

"It is a great effort by all Argentines, because no other economic sector is receiving these type of benefits," said President Fernandez as she announced the emergency decree.

President Fernandez has had a strained relationship with the farming sector, which last year staged months of protests forcing her government to back down on an increase on export taxes.

While her announcement could be seen as a rapprochement with the agricultural sector, she also made it clear that her government was not ceding easily to its demands, correspondents say.

"If hotel owners are struggling because the weather is bad and tourists don't come, or if business is bad for restaurant owners, shopkeepers, or builders, there is no law that says they shouldn't pay taxes all year and can put it off to the following year."

However, farmers' leaders indicated the measures did not go far enough.

"The only thing this announcement achieves is to postpone the payment of taxes, and that is of no use to the farmer who has lost his entire crop," Cristian Roca of the Argentine Agrarian Federation told BBC Mundo.

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K.R 




The devastating string of tropical storms and hurricanes that rushed through the Caribbean in the last month - Fay, Gustav, Hanna and Ike - left hundreds dead and tens of thousands of people hurt and displaced in Haiti

In Cuba, Gustav and Ike destroyed or damaged hundreds of thousands of homes. A fifth of the population was evacuated. The scale of devastation calls for an extraordinary assistance effort that is, so far, not happening. While the United States has offered some emergency aid to Haiti, it has not done enough for an impoverished nation that Americans have a moral responsibility to help. And the Bush administration's peculiar fixation with an obsolete trade embargo and deep-pocketed anti-Castro hard-liners in Miami is standing in the way of dispatching desperately needed assistance for Cuba. In the last week, Washington has announced $10 million in aid for Haiti. It is a good start. But Haiti, the poorest country in the Western Hemisphere, will need more. The United Nations has asked for more than $100 million to help those stricken by the storm. Aid to Cuba is being complicated by outdated Cold War politics. The United States has, so far, offered only $100,000 in aid, with a promise of more if Cuba allows a U.S. team in to assess the damage. Havana has foolishly rejected it. And the United States is refusing to temporarily ease core aspects of the longstanding trade embargo to help Cuba deal with the emergency.
S.I.


Thousands march in Baghdad against U.S. pact

 

29.08.2008 

Sat Oct 18, 2008 | | By P. Graff BAGHDAD (Reuters) - Thousands of followers of anti-American cleric Moqtada al-Sadr took to the streets on Saturday in a demonstration against a pact that would allow U.S. forces...
T.U.
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