President
Cristina Fernandez speaking at Harvard University denied there was a “dollar
clamp”, chided some students for making the same “monochord questions” as the
Argentine media, attacked the IMF and finally described a question on her wish
for re-re-election as ‘abstract’ since it does not depend from her or a single
party.
Cristina Fernandez at the Kennedy school of
government came out aggressive.
“There
is no such thing as a dollar clamp in Argentina”, said strongly Cristina
Fernandez on Thursday addressing students as the Kennedy School of Government
forum.
“The
dollar clamp is a ‘media made up phrase’; Argentina is the second country with
dollars after the US, but we had a problem during the last election because of
strong rumours that said we were planning to devalue. This led to the flight of
four billion dollars in cash, stacked away, something which does not happen in
Brazil, Chile or Colombia”, underlined CFK.
“There
is great misunderstanding about the issue and much media muddling. I’m not
blaming anybody; I also had a deposit in US dollars”.
However
addressing the student who was Argentine the president asked him if it was a
fair question to ask about the so-called dollar clamp.
“Do you
have an idea of how many Argentines can’t even make it to the University of La
Matanza (a poor neighbourhood of Buenos Aires and stronghold of the dominating
Peronist movement)?
On
re-re-election the president was evasive.
“It’s
not whether I want it, but rather of what I can and should do. It is an
abstract question because the Constitution does not allow a third mandate. At
home we discuss many things, a constitutional reform does depend on me or an
only political party”, said CFK.
Another
student asked about her patrimony to which the president said she could give an
account of each of her assets and added “my economic position is because I’ve
worked all my life and because I have been a very successful solicitor”.
An
Argentine student timidly said he felt one of the few privileged Argentines
because he could ask the President and then brought up the issue of the
government’s ‘self-criticism’.
“That
short phrase you are using. Look, I’ve talked with millions of Argentines. It
seems I was numb. You are intelligent kids you can’t go around repeating in
monochord what two or three journalists have come up with”, said CFK
increasingly annoyed by some of the questions.
As in
previous speeches in the US and before answering questions CFK was particularly
critical of multilateral organizations and at the same underlined the
successful policies of her administration.
“We
can’t say we are living in Disney World. Argentina is no paradise or Disney but
we have improved our situation”, she said in reference to policies implemented
in the country since 2003.
She then
went after the IMF. “International multilateral bodies evidently are not
working, and not recently, but from a long time back”.
On the
current economic crisis that the developed countries are living in CFK affirmed
that “the economic conflict has turned political,” and added that “as a
president, I'm obliged to protect the Argentines' reserves”.
She
added that “the core of the international crisis was that they went from a
production economy to believe that money could reproduce by money itself.”
And
regarding the 2008 financial crisis of the United States, the Argentine
president reminded that “the investment banks had built a series of economic
derivatives that led to the collapse of banking institutions”.
With a
degree of irony CFK said that Argentine sovereign debt ballooned in the
nineties with the one Peso-one dollar convertibility system implemented by then
Finance minister Domingo Cavallo. “I believe that at some time he (Cavallo)
taught here in Harvard, well what he did is Argentina was totally absurd”.
When
asked about the controversy generated around the dubious rates and indexes
release by the Indec stats agency such as the inflation rate, the President
obligingly responded by asking what the US annual inflation rate was, to then
unwittingly add: “but give me the official rate”.
Informed
it was around 2% on annual average, CFK just said: “Oh, really? Come on! And
you believe that? If Argentina's inflation rate was at 25% like some people
say, the country will blow up in the air”.
CFK also
had time for a quick reference to the bilateral conflict with the UK over the
Falkland Islands and again attacked multilateral organizations.
“The UN
Security Council has lost all functionality because we are in a new scenario,
with problems totally different to those after World War II”.
According
to the Buenos Aires media over 2.800 graduates and under graduates registered
for the Argentine president conference. However since the capacity of the forum
is 700 they had to draw lots for the seats.
Another
group of an estimated fifty Argentine residents were also waiting anxious to
meet President Cristina Fernandez when she walked into Harvard University, but
as in Buenos Aires banging pots and pans and with signs complaining about
“Korruption” lack of security, no re-re-election and more respect for the
Argentine media.
Before
flying to Boston for the conference at Harvard Cristina Fernandez received the
president of the Exxon Mobile Corporation, Rex Tillerson.
The
meeting took place at the Mandarin Oriental hotel in New York at 5:30 pm (local
time). Also present in the meeting were Argentine ambassador to the US Jorge
Argüello, Legal and Technical secretary Carlos Zannini and presidential
spokesman Alfredo Scoccimarro.
On
Thursday night, Fernández de Kirchner had confirmed that Tillerson had
requested to meet with her during her stay in the US.
Following
the Harvard appointment the Argentine president and her delegation were
scheduled to leave from Boston arriving in Buenos Aires early Friday morning.
No comments:
Post a Comment