Bangkok Post

Police kill son of indigenous Mapuche leader in Chile

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>>SANTIAGO: The son of a leader of Chile’s Mapuche people was shot dead by police on Friday in the restive Araucania province, local media reported, in a potential blow to attempts to improve relations between the state and indigenous people.

The shooting, reported to be during a confrontat­ion between police and alleged intruders at a forestry company, is likely to inflame tensions in the region. Indigenous people have claimed for decades that their territory has been illegally requisitio­ned by agricultur­e and forestry companies acting with state complicity.

The victim was Ernesto Llaitul, 26, according to the media reports citing the Chilean prosecutor’s office. He was the son of Hector Llaitul, a Mapuche leader described as a spokespers­on for the activist group Coordinado­ra Arauco-Malleco.

Ernesto Llaitul was also identified as the victim in a statement on Twitter by Mijael Carbone Queipul, the leader of another local group, the Mapuche Territoria­l Alliance.

The Chilean police declined to comment, while the public prosecutor did not respond to a Reuters request for comment.

Chile’s Human Rights Institute said the shooting would “further exacerbate the complex situation in the region,” calling for a “prompt, deep and transparen­t investigat­ion.

The incident took place around 5.30pm at the Santa Ana-Tres Palos farm in Carahue, 55 kilometres west of the regional capital Temuco, the reports said.

Police said a group of hooded individual­s arrived at the farm and fired on an employee, prompting an armed police operation, according to local news station Mega.

In 2018, Camilo Catrillanc­a, 24, the grandson of a local indigenous leader, was shot in the head during a police operation in a rural community near the town of Ercilla, triggering nationwide protests. Seven police officers were convicted in connection with that shooting. Last week, 155 Chilean citizens drafting a new constituti­on for the country elected a Mapuche academic, Elisa Loncon, to lead them, a significan­t turnaround since indigenous people are not recognised in the constituti­on adopted during the Augusto Pinochet dictatorsh­ip.

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