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Ecuador protests turn violent Printer friendly page Print This
By Staff Writers, teleSUR
teleSUR
Friday, Jul 3, 2015

A composite image shows a broken police shield and a police officer in a hospital after receiving treatment for a leg fractured in clashes with protesters, Quito, Ecuador, July 3, 2015. | Photo: @ppsesa

The Ecuadorean national police reported that four officers were injured as a result of attacks by right-wing anti-government protesters.

Anti-government protestors attacked police Thursday in the central of the Ecuadorean capital in an effort to reach government supporters — who had assembled in front of the presidential palace — and provoke violent clashes.  

Interior Minister Jose Serrano had warned Wednesday that intelligence officials had unearthed a plot by right-wing opposition forces to overthrow the government, including a scheme to attack security forces and storm the presidential palace in Quito. They hoped to “occupy the Carondelet Palace by force, gather the majority of people and distribute them in different sides breaking police fences,” Minister Serrano said.

“They planned to use pointed sticks to break police shields, to throw balloons filled with paint for police to lose visibility, to pepper-spray police horses and dogs so they got scared.”

Opposition protesters appeared to follow that plan but were unsuccessful in their efforts to breakthrough police lines.

However, the Ecuadorean national police reported that four officers were injured as a result of the attacks. Images posted online showed injured officers being carried to an ambulance.

Meanwhile the national police shared a tweet on their Twitter account of injured officers and a riot shield that had been shattered by opposition protesters.

The recent round of protests against the government of President Rafael Correa have often resulted in violence with some protesters openly calling for the ouster of the democratically-elected government.

This led to Culture Minister Guillaume Long to characterize the current situation in the country as a struggle for democracy. “Today that we are facing this threat, this real threat of destabilization ... it is fundamental that the people of Ecuador come here and celebrate democracy,” Long told teleSUR in an exclusive interview.

“We're not going to allow more coups,” he added. In contrast to the violent clashes by opposition groups, government supporters staged a festive rally in the capital where President Correa led chants calling for coup-plotters to cease trying to overthrow the government.


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