Anti-government
protesters from different parts of the country traveled to the capital
to cap their "Marches for Dignity” with a rally there, voicing their
discontent at low wages and a lack of job security.
Organizers
claimed that at least 200,000 people had attended the event, while the
local prefecture put the turnout at only 6,000.
Waving
flags and carrying banners that read, "Bread, work, roof and equality,”
demonstrators chanted slogans against Spanish Prime Minister Mariano
Rajoy and his government’s labor reforms.
Rajoy’s new measures include a 21-percent sales tax and a 3.5-billion-euro cut to budgets for local councils.
"We
demand a little dignity, above all for workers and for our children who
are going to live in conditions worse that we have. We need fair
salaries. Dignity for the Spanish people,” a retired protester said in
the rally.
"I am here to demonstrate in favor of dignity for the
working class and to show my solidarity and support for the ideals we
all have,” said another.
Dozens of trade unions and left-wing
groups also joined the Saturday protest, calling for a protection of
workers’ rights and a stable pension system.
TEHRAN, Young Journalists Club (YJC) - Since
Rajoy’s conservative government adopted labor reforms in 2012, Spain
has experienced an economic growth. It also saw a nearly 10-percent cut
in unemployment over a period between 2013 and the first quarter of this
year.
Critics, however, say the downside is that many jobs are
precarious, with no guarantee of working hours, and are often poorly
paid as the minimum wage in Spain is 825 euros per month.
Spain is
also one of the European countries that received bailout funds from the
International Monetary Fund and the European Union. In return for the
loans, the Spanish government has had to enforce unpopular austerity
measures.
The country has been hit by a wave of anti-austerity
demonstrations and strikes since the country’s economy fell into
recession in 2008.