Los Angeles Times

Focus of Chile protests shifts to social inequality

- By Jorge Poblete Poblete is a special correspond­ent.

SANTIAGO, Chile — “The people, united, will never be defeated,” chanted a lone masked woman in the middle of Plaza Baquedano, a central gathering spot in Chile’s capital.

As she repeated the phrase, thousands of people, mostly young, ran in all directions, fleeing water cannons and tear gas, as police sought to disperse some 20,000 protesters. The clock had just struck 8 p.m. Tuesday, marking the beginning of the fourth evening of curfew in Santiago, home to more than 7 million.

“I’m here today because social injustices are very harsh in Chile today,” said the masked woman, Marcela Balbontin, covering her face with a handkerchi­ef with a blue and red flower print. “We have a deaf government that doesn’t understand anything.”

The protests that have paralyzed this South American nation began last week as a social media campaign by middle and high school students who called on commuters to jump subway turnstiles in rejection of transit fare hikes announced Oct. 6.

Since then, the protests and curfews have spread to most of the country, resulting in at least 18 deaths and an unpreceden­ted state of emergency, the first declared under a democratic government in the South American nation. At least four deaths were attributed to the police or military; other people were killed during looting, fires or other incidents.

According to the government, 220,000 people marched throughout the country on Tuesday in 54 separate demonstrat­ions aimed at the administra­tion of President Sebastian Pinera, who eventually rescinded the fare hike. By then, the protests had expanded to include demands to reduce widespread social inequality.

The state of emergency granted the armed forces control of security and the power to restrict free assembly. For many Chileans, the images of soldiers in the streets brought back dark memories of the military junta of Gen. Augusto Pinochet, who ruled the nation from 1973 to 1990.

“My parents are from a frightened generation, but there is another generation that is not afraid and is here now,” said Belen Leiva, 25, an actress. “That’s what has made Chile stand up and say, ‘Enough.’ ”

Along Alameda Avenue, Santiago’s main boulevard, songs by Victor Jara — who was tortured and slain in the early days of the Pinochet junta — and the popular group Los Prisionero­s can be heard blaring from apartments. The few vehicles on the avenue must avoid barricades set on fire.

Military checkpoint­s dot the city, and residents must show a pass to proceed after curfew. Soldiers are seen in all subway stations, which were attacked by protesters after the fare hike proposal was announced.

One mile west of Plaza Baquedano is the Hotel Plaza San Francisco, where Nelson Concha, 63, works the night shift as a private guard. He said that many of the guests have left, alarmed by events in a nation often portrayed as an oasis in violence-ridden Latin America, albeit one with deep divisions between rich and poor.

“I lived the coup and I don’t want to live my last years like that. So I hope this calms down,” said Concha, referring to the 1973 coup that ousted democratic­ally elected President Salvador Allende and brought Pinochet to power. “But the demands are legitimate. I will retire in two years and, like many, I will receive just over $200 a month. That forces older people to continue working and it’s just wrong.”

Meanwhile, Pinera, a conservati­ve who over the weekend spoke of “being at war,” changed his tone.

“It is true that problems accumulate­d for many decades and that different government­s were not able to recognize this situation of inequity and abuse in all its magnitude,” he said. “I recognize and apologize for this lack of vision.”

He then announced measures to increase the minimum wage, bolster retirement payments, freeze electricit­y rates and reduce salaries of senior public officials.

The announceme­nt did not have the expected result. Massive demonstrat­ions continued Tuesday night and Wednesday.

 ?? Pablo Vera AFP/Getty Images ?? DEMONSTRAT­ORS are sprayed with water by police in Santiago. Protests have spread across Chile.
Pablo Vera AFP/Getty Images DEMONSTRAT­ORS are sprayed with water by police in Santiago. Protests have spread across Chile.

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