The Telegram (St. John's)

Military says ‘nothing to hide’ amid allegation­s of rights violations

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SANTIAGO — Chile’s military said it would investigat­e allegation­s of human rights violations in days of riots, looting and protests throughout the country that have left 15 dead and led to the arrest of more than 2,600.

Ten cities have been placed in a state of emergency and under evening lockdown since riots broke out last Friday during protests at high living costs and inequality.

As pressure on the government mounted, center-right President Sebastian Pinera said he would meet with opposition leaders on Tuesday to forge a “new social contract.”

Only minor incidents were reported into the early hours of Tuesday, the military said.

The general in charge of security in Santiago said he was nonetheles­s aware of videos circulatin­g on social media suggesting brutality by police or the military in dealing with protesters and vandals.

“We are investigat­ing every one of these situations. We’re not going to hide anything,” General Javier Iturriaga told reporters.

Later in the morning, interior ministry sub-secretary Rodrigo Ubilla declined to identify the 15 people killed since last Friday.

In a heated exchange with reporters, he said 11 people had died in arson attempts, looting and rioting in Santiago, while two people had died of gunshot wounds. Two others died in vehicle-related accidents, one outside of Santiago and one, further south, in the port city of Talcahuano.

The Talcahuano prosecutor said that case involved a 23-yearold man run over by a military vehicle.

The Chilean Institute for Human Rights said by Monday night it had registered 84 people injured by firearms.

Amnesty Internatio­nal on Tuesday said in an open letter to Pinera that it was concerned over human rights violations, and limitation­s imposed by the military during city-wide evening lockdowns.

“The sole fact that some groups or people have committed acts of violence in a protest does not authorize security forces to dissolve them with the use of force,” Amnesty Internatio­nal Americas director Erika Guevara said.

U.N. human rights boss Michelle Bachelet, a former president of Chile, called on Monday for independen­t investigat­ions into the deaths in weekend protests, citing “disturbing allegation­s” of excessive use of force by security forces.

SANTIAGO RUBBLE

The widespread protests sowed destructio­n across the city. Street cleaners and working parties of volunteers on Tuesday struggled to tidy and repair Santiago’s central Plaza Italia, the focal point of much of the unrest, was littered with broken glass and stone, graffiti and still-smoldering fires.

Many downtown streets still reeked of tear gas, and the majority of schools across the city remained closed on Tuesday.

Traffic and public transporta­tion were snarled across the city during the morning commute.

Roxana Yanez, 56, a factory worker, said she had had a difficult commute.

“On the one hand, we support these protests. We don’t earn much, just enough to pay our bus fare,” she said. “What we don’t support is disorder, riots, looting. That doesn’t help.”

The protests were sparked by an increase in public transport fares in early October. But they reflect simmering anger over intense economic inequality in Chile, as well as costly health, education and pension systems seen by many as inadequate.

“This won’t stop until people see real change,” said Brandon Rodriguez, 25, a security guard. “Government­s of the left and right have come and gone...but nothing changes for ordinary people.”

The unrest has yet to dock copper output in Chile, the world’s top producer, mining officials said.

Workers at BHP’S Escondida copper mine, the world’s largest, nonetheles­s initiated a 5-hour strike Tuesday morning, union officials told Reuters.

At Santiago’s internatio­nal airport, many passengers were stranded after hundreds of flights were canceled by major airlines over several days and airlines laid out camp beds on the airport forecourt to accommodat­e them.

 ?? REUTERS ?? Soldiers patrol after protests against Chile’s state economic model in Santiago, Chile on Tuesday.
REUTERS Soldiers patrol after protests against Chile’s state economic model in Santiago, Chile on Tuesday.

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