Panama reduces fuel prices in face of protests


Panama residents say protests will continue until there is a general reduction in prices and gasoline rates drop below US$3 per gallon. – EPA pic, July 12, 2022.

PANAMA’s president announced a reduction in gasoline prices and freezing of rates for several other essential products today in the face of continuing protests against inflation and corruption. 

“I understand the dissatisfaction of various sectors with the situation we are experiencing, caused by the effects of the pandemic and the consequences of the conflict in Ukraine,” Laurentino Cortizo said in a statement. 

The price of gasoline for private vehicles will be reduced to US$3.95 (RM17.53) per gallon (3.79 litres) from July 15, he said, a drop of 24% from the price at the end of June. 

Public transport has already benefited from the lower price since May. 

Today, hundreds protested in Panama in the second week of demonstrations against increases in fuel prices, which have risen 47% since January. 

Cortizo also announced that his government would draft a decree to freeze the prices of a dozen essential food products.

Several unions, however, say that protests will continue until there is a general reduction in prices and gasoline rates drop below US$3 per gallon. 

In the western provinces of Veraguas and Chiriqui, near the border with Costa Rica, protesters blocked the Inter-American Highway, which connects the country to the rest of Central America.

In Panama City, a group of students clashed with police around the University of Panama, where a group of people temporarily seized a patrol car and broke its windows. 

Inflation “means that fewer and fewer people can live in dignity”, said Saul Mendez, secretary-general of the country’s main construction union.

According to Mendez, for citizens to regain their purchasing power, the prices of medicine, food, electricity and fuel must be lowered or frozen, in addition to a general wage increase.

The Panamanian government set up a round table today in the city of Santiago de Veraguas, one of the hotbeds of the protest, but no agreement was reached. – AFP, July 12, 2022.


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