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Chile: Protesters Call For Strike, Police Arrest 250

Chile Protests Strike

FEDERICO QUILODRAN   10/ 7/11 01:36 PM ET   AP

SANTIAGO, Chile — Chile's union and student leaders called Friday for shutting down the nation's economy for a day in response to a police crackdown on education reform demonstrations that resulted in more than 250 arrests and left 30 people injured.

Arturo Martinez, who runs the CUT labor coalition, set the nationwide strike for Oct. 19. By his side was student leader Camila Vallejo, who accused the government of letting police attack peaceful marchers Thursday in violation of Chile's constitution.

But the government warned that it will respond firmly to any violence stemming from mass protests.

"Our hand won't tremble and we won't show any weakness in seeking to control situations of public order," said government spokesman Andres Chadwick.

"They're not going to weaken us by attacking police and making them victims," he added.

The government refused to authorize Thursday's march, which was called by students after talks on demands for free, better-funded and higher-quality state-run education through the university level broke down Wednesday night.

Police turned out in large numbers even before their march began, using water cannons, tear gas and officers on horseback to keep about 10,000 students from gathering. Officers chased rock-throwing protesters onto university campuses and fired tear gas into the student government headquarters, Vallejo said.

By day's end, 168 had been arrested in the capital, and more than 100 more around Chile. Police said 25 officers and five civilians were injured.

The protests continued into Thursday night, with large numbers of Chileans turning out to bang pots and pans across metropolitan Santiago.

Chadwick defended the police response, which included arrests of at least five journalists as they covered the disturbances, prompting a strong protest from Chile's journalists' union and news organizations.

"If the police overreacted, we're going to control that, but we are going to respect the police, we are going to support the police, because it's the only way we can apply the law, work within the law and respect the law," Chadwick said.

The prolonged conflict seems to have hit a dead end. Education Minister Felipe Bulnes and President Sebastian Pinera are rejected the key student demands of changing Chile's largely privatized system, which puts most of the burden of funding education on individual families, with one that gives the state a central role in ensuring free, high-quality education. The activists want to finance it by raising taxes on the rich and businesses.

Bulnes said Friday that the government is not preparing any new proposals to try to get students back to the negotiating table, beyond the 21-point plan Pinera already sent to Congress, which reforms the existing private-focused system but ignores several of the movement's key demands.

Vallejo said the students will prepare now to make the government pay in the next elections, and "keep this movement going as long as we have to."

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SANTIAGO, Chile — Chile's union and student leaders called Friday for shutting down the nation's economy for a day in response to a police crackdown on education reform demonstrations that resul...
SANTIAGO, Chile — Chile's union and student leaders called Friday for shutting down the nation's economy for a day in response to a police crackdown on education reform demonstrations that resul...
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
Fahrenheit 451 usedbooks
activist and progressive bookstore
01:22 PM on 10/08/2011
Fascism runs long and deep old habits are hard to change! Andres Chadwick just represents a new order of U.S. backed corporate bullies and fascists the names have changed but the games the same Corporate Domination. Look opposition wants to raise taxes on the rich and corporations for education; sound familiar? We support Arturo Martinez and the CUT labor coalition and student leader Camila Vallejo. Seize the Streets fah451bks
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dayzee10
Get busy living or get busy dying! Damn right
08:08 AM on 10/08/2011
Saw all the police and for a minute thought this was the attack on protestors in New York
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04:15 PM on 10/07/2011
The mining companies (foreign owned) could have easily paid for the entire education of generations of Chileans.
The value in a government is what it does for it's citizens, not in how cheap it makes it for other countries corporations to make money.
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LiamMc
03:30 PM on 10/07/2011
"A country's development is expressed by the quality of its schools, not by the quality of its highways." "Commander Camila Vallejo, the student who can shut down a city" has just been given a second chance to embellish that acolade. The movement's aim is reform an educational system leftover from the Pinochet era. (quotes: Guardian/UK)
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looneydoone
not a "cookie"
03:18 PM on 10/07/2011
Pinera ran on a free education platform during his campaign for the Presidency

Just another billionaire, "free market"" corporatist, right winger elite Harvard grad Uncle Sam likes in Latin America. He's already given the rights to operate Chiles 2 largest energy producers to SEMPRA/parent company of San Diego Gas & Electric. Yep, the same investor owned multinational that's responsible for several deaths, and 2600 homes burnt to the ground during 2003 and 2007 wildfires caused by faulty maintenance on their transmission lines