Protests against water privatization repressed, 13 violently arrested in Suchitoto

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Riot Police prepare to attack protesters in Suchitoto (Photo Prensa Grafica)

On July 2, various organizations and communities in the municipality of Suchitoto gathered for a protest against the official announcement of the National Policy of Water Decentralization by President Antonio Saca. The peaceful protest was brutally repressed by the riot police (UMO) along with specialized forces of the National Civil Police (PNC). In the end, 13 people were arrested by the police and accused of public disorder, including four leaders of the rural development organization CRIPDES. The riot police eventually opened fire on the protest with rubber bullets, tear gas, and pepper spray, injuring around 75 people. Throughout the day helicopters circled Suchitoto and San Salvador, and the riot police didnt withdraw from the scene until well into the afternoon.

Saca was planning to announce his new decentralization plan in Suchitoto but the protests, led by the water workers union SETA, CRIPDES, and a number of other groups, prevented him from arriving. Coordinated street blockades turned back his caravan, and Saca was forced to return by helicopter to the Presidential Palace in San Salvador, where he then held a press conference to formally announce the new policy. The Salvadoran social movement has increased its opposition to water privatization, bringing together many groups organizing at the national level to raise awareness about the effects of water privatization, while countering Sacas plan to privatize both water and health care with concrete alternatives.

Social movement and solidarity organizations have denounced the unlawful arrests of peaceful protesters and the repression against organizers and movement leaders in general. Yesterday and today they are holding meetings with the governments Human Rights Office ombudswoman Beatrice de Carrillo to request her accompaniment in their demand to have the 13 jailed protesters released without charges, and ask that she denounce the increasing repression against the social movement. The organizations will be presenting a resolution to the Legislative Assembly on July 3 to demand the deputies from the different parties also repudiate recent acts of repression against the movement.

Mario Belloso captured nearly a year after university repression and police shooting

Meanwhile, on the same morning as the protests in Suchitoto, the PNC and Salvadoran Armed Forces concluded a massive operation of some 300 officers who worked to capture Mario Belloso, the man accused of killing two police officers during a protest last July. Belloso was apprehended in his own home during the early morning and then paraded in front of news cameras shortly thereafter. The story filled newspaper and television reports and gave Minister of Security Rene Figueroa and PNC Director Rodrigo Avila the opportunity to attack youth organizations and the FMLN, insinuating that these groups have been aiding Belloso in his efforts to evade arrest over the last year.

In the raid of Bellosos home, the PNC claims to have found FMLN paraphernalia, along with specific documents in his computer that tie him to various youth organizations. Perhaps the most ridiculous claim made by President Saca is that Belloso was the intellectual author of the disturbances in Suchitoto; Figuero and Avila, meanwhile, accused the FMLN of being behind the protests. In an official communiqué following the arrest of Belloso the FMLN stated that, We reject and repudiate the coarse pretenses of extreme right-wing politicians, as well as certain news media aligned with the party in power, who are blaming our party for the regretful events of July 5, 2006. Only perverse minds would have the courage to make such unfounded accusations. Human Rights Office ombudswoman Beatrice de Carrillo called the arrest a political show by the government, while Ricardo Alfaro Barahona of the Forum for the Defense of the Constitution raised questions about the timing of the arrest, as it coincided precisely with the police repression in Suchitoto.

Student groups at the National University are bracing for more attacks by the PNC, as movement organizations strategize about how to respond to the recent spate of repression and the continued attacks that are sure to follow.

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