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Buenos Aires Times | Buenos Aires Province agrees to buy 10 million doses of Covaxin vaccine

Governor Axel Kicillof says deal with Indian laboratory Bharat Biotech depends on four conditions and that province will offer shots "to the national government for distribution among all provinces."


Argentina , India , Buenos-aires , Distrito-federal , Bharat , Axel-kicillof , Daniel-goll , Alimentosy-tecnolog , Carlos-blanco , National-institute-of-virology , Indian-council-of-medical-research , Buenos-aires-province-governor-axel-kicillof

Buenos Aires Times | Parallel power

La Cámpora, Axel Kicillof and the Instituto Patria are gaining power within Argentina’s government. Who’s who, what are their differences and what future clashes lie ahead.


Ushuaia , Tierra-del-fuego , Antáidae-islas-del-atláico-sur , Argentina , Mar-del-plata , Buenos-aires , La-pampa , Cóba , Uruguay , River-plate , Uruguay-general , Carmen-de-areco

Buenos Aires Times | What we learned this week: May 15 to 22

Buenos Aires Times | What we learned this week: May 15 to 22
batimes.com.ar - get the latest breaking news, showbiz & celebrity photos, sport news & rumours, viral videos and top stories from batimes.com.ar Daily Mail and Mail on Sunday newspapers.

Santiago-del-estero , Argentina , Buenos-aires , Distrito-federal , Rafaela , Santa-fe , Paris , France-general- , France , Uruguay , Venezuela , French

Buenos Aires Times | Alberto Fernández's European vacation


Alberto's European tour | Art by Joaquín Temes
Almost as if it were a nice vacation, Alberto Fernández’s “eurotrip” helped him step out from the trenches of domestic politics, with the president receiving praise from his European counterparts and a generalised show of support from some of Argentina’s most powerful allies.
This support, in particular with regards to ongoing negotiations with the International Monetary Fund and the Paris Club over Argentina’s sovereign debt, helps prop up the figure of Economy Minister Martín Guzmán, under a heavy dose of friendly fire over the past several weeks and months. Interestingly, with Cristina Fernández de Kirchner in charge of the Executive given Alberto’s absence, all seemed quiet at the domestic front, despite a series of measures passed by the Kirchnerite-controlled Senate which aimed at further conditioning the economy minister’s ongoing negotiations, which coincidentally or not occurred as Guzmán and Alberto were meeting with IMF chief Kristalina Georgieva, her second-in-command in charge of the Americas, Julie Kozack, and the head of the Paris Club’s boss, French Finance Minister Bruno Le Maire. Not of real concern to Guzmán, at least publicly, as sources brushed off the Kirchnerite idea of not using the IMF’s special drawing rights (SDRs) to pay off debt as nothing more than a statement. Guzmán even had the holy blessing of none other than Pope Francis, who hosted the Columbia University academic along with his boss, the law professor from the Universidad de Buenos Aires, in Vatican City toward the end of the trip.

Germany , Iberian-peninsula , Spain-general , Spain , Lisbon , Lisboa , Portugal , Paris , France-general , France , Israel , Argentina

Buenos Aires Times | Is it time to leave or is Argentina worth it?


Cloudy outlook for Argentina. | Art by Joaquín Temes
A growing sense of disillusionment appears to be consuming Argentina. Stuck in a global pandemic with extremely limited access to Covid-19 vaccines, those living here have the added value of suffering a deep stagflation that has taken real wages to their lowest levels in nineteen years. The conversation among those with the possibility of emigrating to the northern hemisphere in search of a better standard of living is about moving to Miami or Europe, particularly among college-educated millennials, while the price of flights to those destinations has skyrocketed. As the political class goes deeper and deeper into the election campaign, increasing the aggressiveness of the public discourse, Argentina’s dwindling middle class is desperately looking to sell the last few dollars they hid under the mattress in order to pay the bills, while the rich are flying to the United States in order to get vaccinated, and their kids mull whether to make that country their new home. This level of pessimism could be justified by figures such as the poverty rate, which topped 42 percent according to the latest figures from the INDEC national statistics bureau, nearly reaching 60 percent for those between 15 and 29 years of age, yet it clashes with the usual stance taken by politicians – from President Alberto Fernández down – who express optimism that Argentina’s structural problems can be overturned. Is their optimism unfounded?

Miami , Florida , United-states , Germany , United-kingdom , Argentina , Buenos-aires , Distrito-federal , Argentine , America , British , Angela-merkel

Buenos Aires Times | City versus Nation


City v Nation. | Art by Joaquín Temes
The fight against the pandemic that last year saw heavyweight political rivals working together has now degenerated into a bitter legal battle between them over whether schools should stay shut for 15 days in the Buenos Aires metropolitan area (AMBA). 
Buenos Aires City Mayor Horacio Rodríguez Larreta, a centre-right opposition leader, has taken the national government all the way to the Supreme Court after President Alberto Fernández announced his decision. A ruling was pending at press time, but like all legal battles involving rival politicians, this is not a straightforward fight. A group of “organised parents” took the case to a Buenos Aires City court first that ruled in their favour, effectively allowing schools to open normally in the capital. But that City court ruling was contested by a federal judge who said Rodríguez Larreta must abide by the national government’s decision and wait for the Supreme Court ruling.

Russia , Buenos-aires , Distrito-federal , Argentina , Russian , Argentine , Horacio-rodr , Cristina-fern , Alberto-fern , Mauricio-macri , Vladimir-putin , Eugenia-vidal