Live
- Sensex, Nifty slip under pressure amid weak global cues
- Posters on novel solutions to problems at Tech Summit
- Conduct Tiruchanoor fest akin to Tirumala’s: TTD EO
- Allocate Khelo India funds for sports infra in SVU
- BJP stages protests in various dists over alleged Waqf encroachments
- CM defends BPL ration card cancellation
- Industry should make use of Rs 1-trn ANRF fund: Goyal
- TTD chairman meets Telangana CM
- MITS faculty awarded with PhD by VTU
- Sannapureddy takes charge as RTC regional chairman
Just In
23 dead as violent unrest in Chile enters fifth week
The death toll from violent unrest in Chile rose to 23 on Friday as the country entered its fifth week of social unrest.
Santiago: The death toll from violent unrest in Chile rose to 23 on Friday as the country entered its fifth week of social unrest.
Looting and demonstrations took place in cities across the South American nation, and an agreement on a political roadmap that will see Chile draft a new constitution has halted neither the anger nor the bloodshed. Furious Chileans have since October 18 been protesting social and economic inequality, and against an entrenched political elite that comes from a small number of the wealthiest families in the country, among other issues.
The crisis is the worst in three decades of Chilean democracy and has led to around 2,000 injuries, including some 280 people who suffered eye damage from shotgun pellets. The latest death was a 13-year-old boy who an interior ministry official said was run over by a van during protests in Arica, about 1,300 miles (2,100 kilometres) north of the capital Santiago. Thousands of people gathered again on Friday in Plaza Italia, the centre of the demonstrations in Santiago and the site of weekly rallies that have seen massive turnout since the social upheaval broke out. "We cannot ease up.
We have to keep expressing ourselves because we have not achieved anything, because the repression continues and also (the government) keeps signing fake agreements, like the peace deal," Claudia Ortolani, a young protester, told AFP. Nearby, hooded men were squaring off against police, who broke up the crowd with tear gas and water cannons. Meanwhile, about a hundred people protested outside the Costanera Centre, the largest mall in South America, as around twenty riot police guarded the entrance to the building. While protests earlier in the week not been huge, the outbursts of violence multiplied in the capital's metro area on Thursday and Friday.
The anger in the streets had eased after last week's agreement by Congress to draft a new Constitution. But with people back on the streets in force again, President Sebastian Pinera's government again appealed for calm. Interior Minister Gonzalo Blumel issued a "deep and sincere call to all political forces" to end the unrest. But in Quilicura, north of Santiago, a shopping centre was set on fire and looted by a crowd while in Puente Alto, another working-class area, a gas station, a police headquarters and businesses were attacked.
In the northern city of Antofagasta, a motorist injured five people when he ran down protesters, while a supermarket was ransacked. Looting, barricades and fires were also recorded in the port of Valparaiso and the city of Vina del Mar, and in Concepcion in the south. "This situation...affects our offer to take charge," said police general Enrique Basseletti, after complaints from people irate that they had not seen police on their streets. Blumel said 2,500 trainee police officers would be put on the streets early to bolster the force. On Thursday, authorities arrested 700 people in the unrest. That followed the police decision to suspend the use of birdshot against protesters, following an outcry over eye injury victims.
© 2024 Hyderabad Media House Limited/The Hans India. All rights reserved. Powered by hocalwire.com