Peru accused of cover-up after indigenous protest ends in death at Devil’s Bend
By Guy Adams in Los Angeles | The Independent/UK, June 19, 2009
The bloodied face of a protester as behind him fellow protestors are arrested by police
First, the police fire tear gas, then rubber bullets. As protesters flee, they move on to live rounds. One man, wearing only a pair of shorts, stops to raise his hands in surrender. He is knocked to the ground and given an extended beating by eight policemen in black body-armour and helmets.
Demonstrators getting worked-over by the rifle butts and truncheons of Peru’s security forces turn out to be the lucky ones, though. Dozens more were shot as they fled. You can see their bullet-ridden bodies, charred by a fire that swept through the scene of the incident, which has since been dubbed “the Amazon’s Tiananmen”.
Continued >>
Tags: indigenous protest, killed and injured people, Peru, police brutality, security forces
This entry was posted on June 21, 2009 at 7:58 am and is filed under Commentary, Human rights, Uncategorized. You can follow any responses to this entry through the RSS 2.0 feed.
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Images reveal full horror of ‘Amazon’s Tiananmen’
Peru accused of cover-up after indigenous protest ends in death at Devil’s Bend
By Guy Adams in Los Angeles | The Independent/UK, June 19, 2009
The bloodied face of a protester as behind him fellow protestors are arrested by police
First, the police fire tear gas, then rubber bullets. As protesters flee, they move on to live rounds. One man, wearing only a pair of shorts, stops to raise his hands in surrender. He is knocked to the ground and given an extended beating by eight policemen in black body-armour and helmets.
Demonstrators getting worked-over by the rifle butts and truncheons of Peru’s security forces turn out to be the lucky ones, though. Dozens more were shot as they fled. You can see their bullet-ridden bodies, charred by a fire that swept through the scene of the incident, which has since been dubbed “the Amazon’s Tiananmen”.
Continued >>
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Tags: indigenous protest, killed and injured people, Peru, police brutality, security forces
This entry was posted on June 21, 2009 at 7:58 am and is filed under Commentary, Human rights, Uncategorized. You can follow any responses to this entry through the RSS 2.0 feed. You can leave a response, or trackback from your own site.