COHA Recommends

‘Protest against human rights violations violently repressed by the police’ – has nobody noticed the irony?

Print Friendly, PDF & Email

On Monday, Santiago de Chile’s leafy borough of Providencia was unexpectedly disturbed by loud protests, tear gas and violent clashes with members of the police. As a prosperous and largely residential ‘comuna’, this area has managed to stay out of the firing line of protests over the last six months. Surprisingly, it was Providencia’s mayor himself, the ex-army colonel Cristián Labbé, who was the cause of the unexpected unrest. A member of the extreme right and close friend to General Pinochet’s family, Labbé organised an event to launch the fourth edition of a book by Gisela Silva Encina called ‘Miguel Krassnoff, imprisoned for serving Chile’. The title is a controversial one given that Krassnoff is widely acknowledged to have been one of the one of the worst oppressors during Pinochet’s regime, associated with the ‘disappearance’ of many members of the opposition in the months following the 1973 coup. He was sentenced to 144 years imprisonment.

A protest against the homage to Krassnoff by citizens affected by the deaths and disappearances as a result of the dictatorship began outside the gates of Club Providencia where the book launch was held. In response to shouted abuse, eggs and paint throwing, the police force saw fit to violently intervene. They employed an excessive amount of tear gas, such that the nearby residents not involved in the protest were affected, and water canon at close range, one woman being hit in the stomach by a water bomb at a distance of only a couple of metres. In doing so, the police showed implicit support for those who applaud a notorious criminal. Surely, something must be wrong here?

To read the rest of the article, click here.

Pulsamérica is a Latin American news link that provides a succinct, impartial summary of the week’s news on a country by country basis. Free from mass-media bias and international agendas, Pulsamérica brings you the news as it is being reported ‘at home’.

By synthesizing the Spanish, Portuguese and French language media across Latin America, our country specialists bring you a digest of what’s happening everywhere on the continent.

A unique resource, Pulsamérica is used by universities, newspapers and charities across the globe, providing a clean and accessible insight into the national events that lie forgotten by the rest of the English-speaking media.