Spanish truckers protest in Madrid after rejecting new government aid
package
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[March 25, 2022]
By Inti Landauro and Susana Vera
MADRID (Reuters) -Spain's transport
minister agreed to meet with striking truck drivers on Friday after they
rejected a 1 billion euro ($1.10 billion) support package aimed at
defusing a 12-day walkout over fuel prices that has caused sporadic
goods shortages.
Minister Raquel Sanchez announced the measures, which include a rebate
of 0.20 euros per litre of fuel and a 1,200 euro bonus, after all-night
talks with transport associations.
But within hours, the unofficial truckers' group that launched the
strike on March 14, and which was excluded from talks with government,
rejected the proposal and began blocking Madrid's central La Castellana
avenue.
"We're going to ask her that we be able to work at a dignified
price...We want guarantees to be able to cover our production costs,"
protest leader Manuel Hernandez told reporters from the centre of the
Madrid march.
Many of the protesters wore high-visibility jackets reminiscent of
France's gilets jaunes protests. Demonstrators also blocked Barcelona's
coastal ringroad and burned tires at a border crossing with Portugal.
Shortly after the protests began Minister Sanchez agreed to meet the
strike leaders, who she had initially dismissed as unrepresentative and
linked to the far-right.
"I have never had any problem meeting with them, but what we must
celebrate today is this agreement...and that is what I am going to try
to explain to them this afternoon," she told state broadcaster TVE.
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Striking truck drivers protest over high fuel prices and working
conditions in Madrid, Spain, March 25, 2022. REUTERS/Susana Vera
Sanchez said all the truckers'
demands were included in the deal, so there was no reason to
maintain the strike.
"This seems like a temporary patch to us that doesn't fix the
problem at all," said protestor Juan Jose Moral, as the angry crowd
marched toward the transport ministry.
The rebate on fuel prices, a quarter of which will be paid by oil
companies, will also apply to other transport companies, she added.
Bus, light truck, ambulance and taxi drivers will also receive -
albeit smaller - bonuses.
As part of the package, the government will approve a new line of
state-backed credit lines with a 12 month-freeze on loan repayments,
or so-called grace periods where companies are just required to pay
interest and not the principal on a loan.
The government has not disclosed the amount of the new liquidity
loans to support mid-sized companies and households in the context
of Russia's invasion of Ukraine.
($1 = 0.9083 euros)
(Additional reporting by Marco Trujillo, Nathan Allen, Belén Carreño,
Jesús Aguado, Emma Pinedo and Christina Thykjaer, Editing by Angus
MacSwan and Raissa Kasolowsky)
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