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'They smashed me in the


head': anger at Piñera as
Chile's bloodied protesters
allege brutality
Death toll rises to 15 in worst unrest Chile has faced since
Pinochet, as armed men in masks prowl Santiago firing at
defiant protesters

A
Jonathan Franklin in clattered overhead and army truck convoys rumbled through the city,
s helicopters
Santiago armed men in masks prowled the streets of Santiago on Monday night, firing at
Tue 22 Oct 2019protesters
15.33 BST defying a fourth night of curfew under martial law.

By Tuesday morning, the official death toll stood at 15. The Chilean government
claimed all the casualties were looters, but there were widespread allegations of brutality by the
military, following the declaration by president, Sebastián Piñera that his country was “at war”.

U.N. human rights chief Michelle Bachelet – a former president of Chile – has called for
independent investigations into the deaths in weekend protests, saying there had been
“disturbing allegations” of excessive use of force by security forces.

“I was coming home and the military patrol stopped me,” said one bruised and bloodied man as
he stumbled home in the early hours of Tuesday morning. “They put me in the truck and – ‘Bang!
bang! bang!’ – they smashed me in the head with the butt of a gun. I begged them to stop but they
kept on kicking me – and they took my friend away.”

The worst unrest Chile has faced since the dying days of Augusto Pinochet’s dictatorship three
decades ago began early last week as a youth revolt against a 3% increase in metro fares that the
government was subsequently forced to scrap.

By Friday the protests had spilled out into widespread streets protests and an outburst of
vandalism and violence – fuelled, analysts say, by deep-rooted disillusionment at how millions of
citizens have been frozen out of Chile’s economic rise.

Piñera’s conservative government declared a state of emergency on Friday night, granting the
government additional powers to restrict citizens’ freedom of movement and their right to
assembly. Soldiers have returned to the streets for the first time since an earthquake devastated
parts of the country in 2010.

Self-defence groups wearing yellow vests have set up citizen militias to defend petrol stations and
small businesses from further looting – and to remain in the streets protesting peacefully.
“The treatment by the military is not dignified,” said Carlos, a 21-year-old street vendor. “If they
want to arrest me then do it, but this is inhumane. An arrest is normal. I am doing what I have to
do … but to beat people to their limit, that is torture.”

Riot police fire a water cannon to disperse demonstrators on La


Alameda in central Santiago on Monday. Photograph: Martin
Bernetti/AFP/Getty

A 22-year-old student who did not want to give his name said: “I’m not in favour of violence [on
the part of the protesters] at all. In fact, I have never liked it. But I think it is the only way that
they [the government] will listen to us. We had many peaceful marches, and they ignored us.

“I want to live peacefully. I live on my own, pay my bills. [But] If I have an accident and can’t work
for a month I can’t pay for food and have to drop out of university.”

In response to Piñera’s declaration of war, he added: “The people clanking pots and holding up
their hands are not military, they are not armed. Even us, erecting barricades, what do we have?
Sticks and stones … these aren’t weapons. What war? Who are they fighting against?”

Demonstrators clash with riot police for Throughout Monday, protesters defied the emergency decree and
a fourth straight day on Monday. confronted police in Chile’s capital, continuing the violent clashes,
Photograph: Claudio Reyes/AFP via
Getty Images
arson and looting.

Only one of the city’s six underground lines was operating because
rioters had burned or damaged many of the stations, and officials said it could take weeks or
months to fully restore service.
Police used teargas and water cannon to break up a march on one of Santiago’s main roads, but
demonstrators repeatedly dispersed then re-gathered elsewhere. Some protesters held up blank
ammunition cartridge allegedly fired by police.

A protester shows a blank ammunition at a protest in Santiago on


Monday. Photograph: Anadolu agency/Getty

Long past the 8pm order to be off the streets, thousands of people stayed out, dancing, playing
music and organising football games.

In Plaza Ñuñoa, a square in the middle-class district of Ñuñoa, families banged on pots and pans
in the traditional Latin American cacerolazo of defiance, and held up handwritten placards calling
on Piñera to quit.

Along Ñuñoa’s Avenida Grecia, a small group of masked people hid behind trees as a military
convoy crashed through their rickety barricades and out the other side. At 11.45pm, nearly four
hours after the nightly curfew, they were still protesting.

Soldiers patrol the presidential government palace during curfew in


Santiago on Monday night. Photograph: Pedro Ugarte/AFP via Getty
Images

“This is not just about the metro. It is about a cumulation of situations and the crisis of the
economic model since we returned to democracy,” said a 31-year-old woman.

“They have privatised healthcare. Pensions for the elderly are miserable. We have conflicts in
every part of our day-to-day life. Day-to-day, we suffer.
“The dictatorship is over. Our generation is not afraid. But now the military are using the same
strategy that they used during the dictatorship, they are shooting.

“We have to keep fighting until this is resolved for all, not just for a sector of the society. Not for
the privileged. Not for the businessmen,” she added.

She had barely finished speaking when a car swerved past the barricade and someone inside it
opened fired.

People ran for cover as eight shots rang out, tearing splinters from the trunk of a tree. No one was
hit. The car made a U-turn, loosing a final fusillade before driving into the night.

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Topics
Chile
Americas
Protest
Augusto Pinochet
features

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