On Wednesday, Power 4 Puerto Rico, a group comprised of diaspora leaders and allies advocating for Puerto Ricans on the island and abroad, released a statement condemning U.S. Judge Laura Taylor-Swain’s approval of a plan to cut Puerto Rico’s public debt by 80 percent and commence debt service payments through 2034, which the group describes as “unsustainable.”
“Power4Puerto Rico has consistently called for the abolition of the unelected, undemocratic and conflicted Junta ruling over Puerto Rico,” the group said. “The US law that created the Junta —PROMESA— is nothing short of enhanced colonialism.”
The Financial Oversight and Management Board for Puerto Rico, known colloquially as “the Junta,” is a governing body created by the Obama administration to manage the U.S. colony’s finances.
Congratulations, Puerto Rico! Judge Swain's confirmation of the #PlanofAdjustment for the CW reduces the claims against the government from $33 billion to just over $7.4 billion. Financial stability. A new chapter to lead to renewed economic prosperity!
— Natalie Jaresko (@njaresko) January 18, 2022
“Congratulations, Puerto Rico!” the board’s executive director, Natalie Jaresko, after news broke of the judge’s decision on Tuesday. “Financial stability. A new chapter to lead to renewed economic prosperity!”
The Power 4 Puerto Rico statement noted that “the actions of the Junta have imposed catastrophic austerity on the backs of working Puerto Ricans, students and the most vulnerable. Now we are saddled with unsustainable debt payments for decades with little to no reforms to improve delivery of essential services, no tools for economic development, and no end in sight to the Junta’s yoke on our people. Now is the time to audit the debt, cancel illegal claims and make Puerto Rico whole again.”
“Judge Swain and the Junta have failed. President Biden promised to avoid these pitfalls and he too failed,” the group added. “Now it is up to Congress to abolish la Junta and cancel [the] illegal debt. Too many lives are at stake for this decision to prevail.”
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Hector Luis Alamo is the Senior Editor at Latino Rebels and hosts the Latin[ish] podcast. Twitter: @HectorLuisAlamo
so they dont want to pay any of the debt back?
spoken by someone who has no idea of colonialism or how this debt happened in the first place
[…] then, the archipelago has choked under a $70 billion debt, an imposed fiscal control board (la Junta), cuts to education and pensions, a collapsing health […]
[…] then, the archipelago has choked under a $70 billion debt, an imposed fiscal control board (la Junta), cuts to education and pensions, a collapsing health […]