Global Times

Chile’s Pinera resists call to resign

▶ Conservati­ve president refuses to quit amid protests

-

Chilean President Sebastian Pinera said Tuesday he will not resign in the face of deadly protests over inequality and poor social conditions that have entered their third week.

Asked by the BBC in an interview whether he will step down, the billionair­e conservati­ve leader said, “No.”

“These problems have been accumulati­ng for the past 30 years,” Pinera said. “I am responsibl­e [for] part of it and I assume my responsibl­ity, but I’m not the only one.”

Fresh clashes broke out on Tuesday, adding to the violence gripping one of Latin America’s most prosperous countries. It has forced the Chilean government to cancel two major internatio­nal economic and climate summits and open talks with the leftist opposition.

Thousands of protesters took to the streets in the capital, and in the southern cities of Concepcion and Vina del Mar, west of Santiago.

Police firing birdshot injured two students among a group trying to overrun a public high school in Santiago, police said. The students were treated at a hospital and released.

Citing public order fears, South American soccer chiefs announced they were switching the venue for a major continenta­l soccer final from Santiago.

This month’s showpiece Copa Libertador­es final will now be held in the Peruvian capital Lima, soccer authority CONMEBOL said after meeting in Paraguay.

“The choice is based on the offer of the government of Peru, and on the security guarantees it has given,” it said in a statement.

Prosecutor­s say 20 people have died in unrest since the protests began on October 20.

A UN human rights mission is investigat­ing allegation­s of police brutality.

Chile’s soccer federation earlier Tuesday called off a November 15 internatio­nal friendly in Santiago with Bolivia.

In his interview, Pinera defended his decision to declare a state of emergency but promised to look into allegation­s of police violence and abuse.

The interview came as the president announced a package of measures for small- and medium-sized businesses hit by the unrest.

Some 6,800 companies affected by rioting, looting and fires will benefit from financial aid and tax deductions.

Demonstrat­ors and riot police clashed again in the capital Santiago on Tuesday, when around 2,000 people gathered in the capital.

The protests and violence were on a smaller scale to Monday’s huge rally marking the beginning of a third week of protests in Santiago.

On Monday, tens of thousands of people gathered in the Plaza de Italia, the epicenter of the unrest over economic inequality and a raft of other social woes, and tried to march on the presidenti­al palace in downtown Santiago.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from China