Facebook Instagram Twitter YouTube

Latin America, New Epicenter of the Pandemic: Coronavirus and Imperialism Lead the Region to Disaster

The WHO warns that Latin America has become the new epicenter of the pandemic. Together with the coronavirus, the region’s inequalities and imperialist oppression will have fatal consequences.

Ana Rivera

May 29, 2020
Facebook Twitter Share
Gravediggers at a mass burial at the Parque Taruma cemetery in Manaus, Brazil, May 26, 2020. Credit: Bruno Kelly

Three months after the first case of coronavirus in Latin America was diagnosed in Brazil, Latin America has now become the new epicenter of the global pandemic. The WHO has warned that the region is now the most affected by the coronavirus. Overall, there are more than 700,000 positive cases. The consequences of the pandemic in Latin America are already very serious, and the forecast is ominous: the epicenter of the pandemic has shifted from China to Europe and then to the United States — now it is hitting the Latin American region, under dire conditions of poverty, debt, and imperialist exploitation.

The most affected country is Brazil, whose right-wing president, Jair Bolsonaro, has publicly dismissed the virus. Brazil accounts for more than half of the cases in Latin America, with 370,000 people infected and more than 23,000 deaths. Estimates indicate that the South American giant could quickly surpass the United States in the number of fatalities. Not only is Brazil the most populous country in Latin America, but it also has the highest rates of inequality and large masses of people living in overcrowded favelas. The youth and the Black population have been disproportionately affected by the pandemic because of the precariousness of both housing and work, a deadly combination. Added to this is a huge political crisis caused by Bolsonaro’s mishandling of the pandemic, which led several officials, including the health minister, to leave the government.

The second-most affected country by infections in Latin America is Peru, whose health system is collapsing, forcing hospitals to admit only those most likely to live, due to the fact that they lack basic protective equipment. Chile is also dangerously close to a health collapse; new revolts have begun in the country over the lack of programs to address unemployment and food scarcity. The revolts against the neoliberal government of President Sebastián Piñera took place last year because of the precarious pension system and the private health care system, which are aggravating the situation of the most vulnerable in the pandemic.

Denialist policies, such as Bolsonaro’s, have had catastrophic effects. But this is not the only reason why the pandemic is so serious in Latin America. The case of Peru is emblematic: despite social distancing and quarantine measures, workers have been forced to continue circulating, because they depend on the informal economy to survive, selling what they can each day in the streets. This has caused the number of infections to rise to more than 100,000, collapsing the health system. In Bolivia, informal workers, who play a crucial role in the country’s economy, are hardest hit by the virus because of lack of protection and the economic crisis; the coup government has responded by increasing militarization and using the pandemic to increase political repression.

But we cannot ignore the fact that imperialist exploitation has had a catastrophic effect on the region: decades of neoliberalism have underfunded health systems throughout Latin America. The systematic indebtedness of the region caused by the IMF and other international organizations has accentuated the fiscal deficits that now aggravate Latin American economies. Even in the midst of the pandemic, and with recommendations to delay the payments, some countries are renegotiating their foreign debts with financial speculators and international organizations, such as Ecuador and Argentina. In this context, the government of Lenin Moreno in Ecuador approved a budget cut that affected working hours and pensions, and fired thousands of workers in the public sector. This has provoked massive protests.

Governments of all political hues in the region have shown that they do not want to break with imperialism. The United States, while closing its borders with Mexico to prevent the entry of migrants, is pressuring the neighboring country to reopen the maquilas, true caves of exploitation that now represent a risk of illness and death for working women there. Trump restricts access to migrants but has no complaints that U.S. companies are exploiting workers in Latin America and in the United States itself. We have seen this in the meat-processing plants that have been transformed into factories of death for a huge migrant population that cannot even organize and is at a disadvantage since they lack English-language skills. Using racist rhetoric, the U.S. government demands that no more migrants enter through the borders, denies migrants access to the health system, and has even intercepted the shipment of medical supplies from China for use in the United States.

In a world where the capitalist class closes ranks against the workers and poor of all countries, and attempts to divide and pit workers against each other, international and working-class solidarity becomes a fundamental task for our class.

Facebook Twitter Share

Latin America

‘You Have to Change Things from the Root’: Interview With a Young Immigrant

Left Voice interviewed a 23-year-old immigrant, factory worker, and student, who told us about his experience crossing the border from Mexico to the U.S. and about the life of Latin American youth in the United States.

Left Voice

April 5, 2024
A square in Argentina is full of protesters holding red banners

48 Years After the Military Coup, Tens of Thousands in Argentina Take to the Streets Against Denialism and the Far Right

Tens of thousands of people took to the streets across Argentina on March 24 to demand justice for the victims of the state and the military dictatorship of 1976. This year, the annual march had renewed significance, defying the far-right government’s denialism and attacks against the working class and poor.

Madeleine Freeman

March 25, 2024

Declaration: End Imperialist Intervention in Haiti, Solidarity with the Haitian People

The “Multinational Security Support Mission” announced by the United States marks a new imperialist-colonial intervention in Haiti by the United States, the UN, and their allies.

The Fight against Javier Milei Has Set The Stage For a Whole New Wave of Struggle

The defeat of the Omnibus Law is a key victory for the movement against Javier Milei’s austerity plan and attacks on democratic rights. It shows that the working class and oppressed have the power to fight against the advance of the Far Right in Argentina and across the world.

Tatiana Cozzarelli

February 9, 2024

MOST RECENT

Columbia University during the encampment for Palestine in April 2024.

To Defend Palestine and the Right to Protest, We Need the Broadest-Possible Unity

The past week has seen a marked escalation in the repression of the pro-Palestine movement, particularly on university campuses. In the face of these attacks, we needs broad support across all sectors.

Charlotte White

April 25, 2024
Texas State Troopers on horseback work to disperse pro-Palestinian students protesting the Israel-Hamas war on the campus of the University of Texas in Austin on Wednesday April 24.

Faculty at University of Texas Austin Strike in Solidarity with Student Protesters

Pro-Palestine movements on college campuses are facing harsh repression, and faculty across the nation are taking action in solidarity. At UT Austin, faculty are the first to call a strike in solidarity with their repressed students. More faculty across the country must follow suit.

Olivia Wood

April 25, 2024
Encampment at City College, CUNY, in solidarity with Palestine on April 25, 2024.

CUNY Joins Universities Around the Country, Sets Up Gaza Solidarity Encampment

Today, New York’s largest public university set up an encampment for Gaza, calling for divestment, cops off campus, an end to McCarthyist repression, and for a People’s CUNY.

Tatiana Cozzarelli

April 25, 2024
A group of Columbia University faculty dressed in regalia hold signs that say "end student suspensions now"

Faculty, Staff, and Students Must Unite Against Repression of the Palestine Movement

As Gaza solidarity encampments spread across the United States, faculty and staff are mobilizing in solidarity with their students against repression. We must build on that example and build a strong campaign for our right to protest.

Olivia Wood

April 23, 2024