Police terror persists in southwest Colombia

Police injured at least eight people in southwest Colombia after the assassination of a student leader fueled anti-government protests and police brutality.

The police violence took place in Popayan, the capital of the Cauca province, where student leader Esteban Mosquera was assassinated on Monday.

After months of police brutality, anti-government protests lost momentum in Colombia, except in Popayan where the assassination of Mosquera fueled protests.

Popayan Government Secretary Elvia Rocio, told government-friendly media that violence erupted “when kids calling themselves Frontline attacked police.”

Rocio was unable to provide evidence to confirm her claim and was contradicted by locals and independent media that accused police unit ESMAD of attacking peaceful protesters.


Student leader assassinated in southwest Colombia


“They’re attacking from all sides”

“They’re attacking from all sides, without mercy,” a reporter of independent television network Canal 2 said.

The television network showed that some of the protesters threw stones at the police in response to the aggression.

Human rights defender German Callejas told local news outlet Sucesos Cauca that “mainly” members of the police “violated human rights,” and attacked journalists and human rights defenders.

Callejas’ claim was confirmed by student leader Hernan Ospina and other locals who said police was firing gas cannisters directly at protesters.

One human rights defender told Canal 2 he was threatened by a policeman who allegedly said “we know where you live.”

Anonymous human rights defender

Human rights organization Justicia y Dignidad said that an alleged policeman in civilian clothing was taking pictures of human rights defenders and journalists.

Locals apparently expel police

Another video published on social media showed locals booing the cops as they retreated from the neighborhood around sunset.

The assassination of the student leader apparently fueled tensions between locals and police, who have been accused of being responsible for the killing of dozens of protesters during the protests that kicked off on April 28.

The overwhelming evidence of police brutality apparently used to quell the protests against far-right President Ivan Duque spurred the human rights commission of the Organization of American States to put Colombia’s government on its despot watchlist with the authoritarian governments of Nicaragua and Venezuela.

 

Related posts

Colombia’s police raid 11 prisons in attempt to curb extortion

Colombia to impose visas requirements on British citizens

Colombia seeks to ban recruitment of mercenaries