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| Chilean President Sebastian Pinera, in an address to the nation on October 26, 2019, promised a major government reshuffle after a week of massive protests (AFP Photo/ Pedro Lopez) |
Santiago (AFP) - Chilean President Sebastian Pinera on Saturday announced a major government reshuffle, a day after more than one million people took to the streets in a massive protest for economic and political change.
"I
asked all ministers to resign in order to form a new government and to be able
to respond to these new demands," he said in an address to the nation,
adding that a highly controversial state of emergency might be lifted Sunday if
"circumstances permit."
The
military also announced that an overnight curfew would be lifted Saturday.
"We
are in a new reality," Pinera said. "Chile is different from what it
was a week ago."
The
government has been struggling to craft an effective response to the massive
protests that were sparked by a rise in subway fares but fueled by a growing
list of economic and political demands that include Pinera's resignation.
The breadth
and ferocity of the demonstrations appear to have caught the government of
Chile -- long one of Latin America's richest and most stable countries -- off
guard.
Another
reshuffling
At least 19
people have died in the worst political violence in decades, and there has been
widespread looting and arson.
Pinera, who
assumed office in March 2018, had already shuffled his cabinet twice in 15
months as doubts grew about a slowing economy and his leadership.
One of the
most controversial members in the current cabinet is Interior Minister Andres
Chadwick, the president's cousin.
The police
and army troops have been accused of using unnecessary force in putting down
the protests. The United Nations is sending a team to investigate allegations
of abuse.
More than
one million people, representing a range of political backgrounds and from all
social classes, took to the streets of Santiago and other cities on Friday in
some of the largest protests ever seen in this country of 18 million.
Demonstrators
carrying indigenous and national flags sang popular resistance songs from the
1973-90 Augusto Pinochet dictatorship era.
Santiago's
governor Karla Rubilar praised the march, saying it represented "the dream
of a new Chile." Police said 820,000 people marched in the capital.
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People
protest under a giant Chilean national flag in Santiago, on October 25
(AFP
Photo/Martin BERNETTI)
|
'Dream of
a new Chile'
For the
past week, pent-up anger has erupted over a socio-economic structure that many
feel has left them by the wayside, with low wages and pensions, costly health
care and education, and a big gap between rich and poor.
The
protesters' demands now includes not only better social benefits but also the
scrapping and replacing of the nation's Constitution, which dates from the
Pinochet dictatorship.
Pinera
apologized earlier in the week for failing to anticipate the outbreak of social
unrest, and he announced a raft of measures designed to placate people, such as
increases in minimum pensions and wages, higher taxes on the wealthy, and a
rollback in the subway fare increase.
He called
on legislators to "urgently approve these projects rather than arguing and
debating so much."
Pinera, a
conservative billionaire, said Friday on Twitter that "we have all heard
the message. We have all changed. With unity and help from God, we will travel
the road towards a Chile that is better for all."
Francisco
Anguitar, a 38-year-old software developer attending the demonstrations Friday,
told AFP, "We're asking for justice, honesty, ethical government. It's not
that we want socialism or communism."
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Drivers
angry over toll charges demonstrate as part of protests over
socio-economic
woes (AFP Photo/Pablo VERA)
|
Drop in
violence
In an
initial burst of violence, metro stations were destroyed, supermarkets torched
and looted, traffic lights and bus shelters smashed, and countless street
barricades erected and set alight.
The
national human rights institute INDH said 584 people have been injured and
2,410 detained during the protests.
Authorities
deployed some 20,000 police and soldiers in Santiago, using tear gas and water
cannons to disperse demonstrators.
Soldiers
have been guarding Santiago's metro stations as three of the seven lines --
which usually carry three million people per day -- have reopened.
Despite a
recent decrease in serious incidents and arrests, the violence has been the
worst since Chile returned to democracy after the Pinochet dictatorship.
The
movement still lacks recognizable leaders and was mostly roused through social
media, which analysts say makes it harder for the government to negotiate any
resolution.
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Demonstrators
play the guitar performing Chilean musician Victor Jara's "The
Right to
Live in Peace" in Santiago, on October 25 (AFP Photo/Martin BERNETTI)
|
APEC
summit still on
The
government said on Thursday that next month's APEC trade summit in Santiago
would go ahead despite the protests.
US
President Donald Trump and his Chinese counterpart Xi Jinping are among those
expected to attend the November 16-17 meeting.





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