A Chilean prosecutor on Wednesday said he would seek court approval to investigate 14 police officers for allegedly torturing protesters during almost three weeks of intense unrest and rioting in the country.

Manual Guerra, the prosecutor for Santiago East, said the investigation was related to two separate cases during a nine-day state of emergency in the capital Santiago from Oct. 18.

One related to the actions of 12 police officers in Nunoa, a bohemian suburb of Santiago, where protesters defied a curfew to conduct successive nights of large but mainly peaceful demonstrations in a central square, a spokesman for Guerra told Reuters without providing further details.

The second related to two officers in the lower-middle-class area of La Florida who were accused of beating a young man who was handcuffed, the spokesman said.

Demonstrators protest against the government in Santiago, Chile, Monday, Nov. 4, 2019. Chile has been facing weeks of unrest,…
FILE – Demonstrators protest against the government in Santiago, Chile, Nov. 4, 2019.

The alleged abuses took place against a backdrop of 20 days of mass rioting, looting and, more recently, peaceful protests over endemic inequality in one of Latin America’s richest nations.

Chile’s worst unrest since the end of Augusto Pinochet’s 1973-1990 dictatorship has caused at least 23 deaths, more than 7,000 detentions, and injuries to 1,659 protesters and 800 police officers, according to authorities and rights groups.

Prosecutors are investigating more than 800 allegations of abuses, including torture, rape and beatings by security forces during demonstrations over inequality and cost of living that have often degenerated into riots.

Guerra’s spokesman said he would seek court authorization to proceed with an in-depth investigation into the alleged abuses by the 14 officers, and request that the officers be held in preventative custody. The crime of torture can carry a prison sentence of between five and 10 years in Chile.

Pinera’s promises

President Sebastian Pinera on Thursday promised to ensure police and soldiers found guilty of rights violations would be prosecuted with the same force as rioters and looters during nearly three weeks of violent protests.

A man takes a photo of portraits of people that have died during anti-government protests in Santiago, Chile, Friday, Nov. 1,…
FILE – A man takes a photo of portraits of people that have died during anti-government protests in Santiago, Chile, Nov. 1, 2019.

A team sent by Michelle Bachelet, the U.N. human rights chief and former Chilean president, and another from Amnesty International, were also in Chile interviewing alleged victims.

“This president is committed to total respect for human rights at all times and in all circumstances,” the center-right Pinera said from La Moneda presidential palace in Santiago.

“With the same force that we are going to investigate, prosecute and sanction those criminal groups who have destroyed property, we will investigate any excess, failure of protocol in the use of force or excessive use of force.”

Pinera said he had sought assurances from armed forces chiefs that international rules on the use of force would be followed after declaring a state of emergency over the unrest that began on Oct. 18 after a hike in public transport fares.

He rejected criticism on social media that his ministers have only visited injured police, not protesters, saying he would visit demonstrators in the coming days.

Lorry blockade

Protests continued Wednesday. A lorry blockade of some major highways over high road tolls caused commuter chaos.

Pinera on Wednesday sent a law to parliament to guarantee a minimum wage of $480 a month, part of an ambitious social spending plan announced last month as the protests grew.

Vehicles block the road during a demonstration against toll charges, on the outskirts of Santiago, Chile November 6, 2019…
Vehicles block the road during a demonstration against toll charges, on the outskirts of Santiago, Chile, Nov. 6, 2019.

“We are responding with action and not just good intentions to those things that people have demanded with so much force,” he said in a televised speech.

Chile’s finance minister told the congressional budgetary committee on Wednesday that the government would draw $600 million from a sovereign wealth fund to finance the social plan.

Ignacio Briones said the $14 billion Social and Economic Stabilisation Fund would also be tapped for $850 million to plug a gap in Chile’s finances, which he said would grow to 2.3% of gross domestic product in 2020.

Chile, one of the region’s most prosperous and normally most peaceful nations, last tapped its sovereign wealth funds after the 2009 subprime financial crisis and a 2010 earthquake.

Chile’s protests are part of a wave of unrest this year around South America, including protests against Bolivia’s President Evo Morales over a disputed election and Ecuador’s Lenin Moreno over economic liberalization reforms.
 

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