Thousands of Brazilians brought some services in
several cities across the country to a standstill on Friday after
launching a national strike to protest against President Jair Bolsonaro's pension reforms proposal.
Ricardo Patah, President of General Union of Workers (UGT) told Al
Jazeera that a "pension reform is important" but not "as it is being
presented by the government."
"All workers must be treated the same and there shouldn't be first or second-class citizens," he said, criticising the current reform's different rules for military, judges and deputies
"Brazil doesn't deserve this level of disrespect against workers," he added. "We didn't vote for Bolsonaro but he was elected democratically and is now on his hands to give us a different country, a Brazil without corruption, with jobs and opportunities."
Early in the day commuters found themselves
stranded in front of closed gates at metro, train and bus stations
across the country. Papers taped to the gates of banks, schools and
shops, warned a strike was ongoing, as workers blocked roads, office
buildings and highway tolls
As part of the pension reform proposal, the
government will seek to raise the retirement age and increase workers'
contributions. The government has said the reforms would generate
billions of dollars in savings, and kick-start Brazil's stagnant economy. But many Brazilians and their unions say the reforms will increase inequalities and hurt workers
"All workers must be treated the same and there shouldn't be first or second-class citizens," he said, criticising the current reform's different rules for military, judges and deputies
"Brazil doesn't deserve this level of disrespect against workers," he added. "We didn't vote for Bolsonaro but he was elected democratically and is now on his hands to give us a different country, a Brazil without corruption, with jobs and opportunities."
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