Protests in Chile turn violent with church set on fire and police using tear gas

World

Protests turned violent in Chile after thousands took to the streets of Santiago to mark one year since mass demonstrations that left 30 dead and thousands injured.

Police engaged in a tense stand-off with protesters, using tear gas and water cannon to disperse crowds in the capital on Sunday.

A church was also seen on fire as protesters threw rocks and fireballs at officers in riot gear.

Protesters flood the streets of Santiago de Chile
Image:
Thousands took to the streets to mark one year since mass student protests demanded reforms
A burning church spire falls to the ground after being set on fire in the Chilean capital
Image:
A burning church spire falls to the ground after being set on fire in the Chilean capital

They were marking one year since mass demonstrations that demanded widespread reforms of the pension, healthcare and education systems in Chile.

The marches began on 18 October 2019 and continued through to December, causing the military to take to the streets for the first time since the rule of General Augusto Pinochet in the 1980s.

Led by students protesting over metro fare rises and sharp increases in the cost of living, they brought light to deep discontent about inequality within Chilean society.

Riot police clash with demonstrators on the streets of Santiago
Image:
A referendum will take place on the Chilean constitution on 25 October
Fires burn in the background of violent protests in Chile
Image:
Fires burn in the background of the protests on Sunday

At least 30 were killed, around 2,500 injured and 2,800 arrested.

This year, demonstrators waved “yes” placards ahead of a referendum on 25 October, when Chileans will vote on whether to scrap the country’s dictatorship era constitution – a key demand of last year’s protests.

Products You May Like

Articles You May Like

Protests break out as hooded fighters torch Christmas tree in Syria
MIT Researchers Measure Quantum Geometry of Electrons in Solid Materials for First Time
Labour or Liz? The taxing question that could come back to haunt Starmer
OpenAI says it needs ‘more capital than we’d imagined’ as it lays out for-profit plan
U.S. launches new probe into legacy Chinese chips as tech pressure on Beijing escalates

Leave a Reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *