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[膠登獨家]智利十萬人示威 警方水砲鎮壓
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Chilean students arrested in school raids after protests[/size=5]
Chilean police have arrested 122 people, many of them teenagers, after raiding secondary schools that had been taken over by their students.
The schools are due to be used as polling stations on Sunday when Chileans choose candidates for the presidential election in November.
The occupation was part of a two-year campaign calling for education reforms.
Police clashed with students in the capital Santiago on Wednesday night after a national protest on Wednesday.
The violence was among the worst seen in Chile since the demonstrations began in 2011, the BBC's Gideon Long reports from Santiago.
The country's powerful student movement has staged major demonstrations over the past two years demanding free and improved education.
Sporadic school and university takeovers have been part of the campaign.
'Order restored'
On Thursday, police launched pre-dawn raids on more than 20 schools across Santiago, where students had barricaded themselves in with tables and chairs. Local media broadcast footage of officers bursting into the buildings.
Interior Minister Andres Chadwick later said security forces had "restored order", adding that most of the evictions had been peaceful.
"As dialogue didn't yield expected results, and given that we are 72 hours away from the start of the primaries, as the government we had the obligation to avoid any disturbances," he said.
The raids came after a day and night of violence in Santiago.
More than 100 people were arrested and 10 police officers were injured after the city-wide demonstration, which drew tens of thousands of students, teachers and unionists.
Violence erupted when masked youths began to throw stones and Molotov cocktails at security forces who responded with tear gas and water cannon.
Although Chile's education system is regarded by many as one of the best in Latin America, students argue it is deeply unfair.
They say middle-class students have access to some of the best schooling in the region, while the poor have to be content with under-funded state schools. The country has no free universities.
The campaign for educational reform is the biggest protest movement Chile has seen since the return to democracy in 1990.
有片
http://www.bbc.co.uk/news/world-latin-america-23088201
Chilean police have arrested 122 people, many of them teenagers, after raiding secondary schools that had been taken over by their students.
The schools are due to be used as polling stations on Sunday when Chileans choose candidates for the presidential election in November.
The occupation was part of a two-year campaign calling for education reforms.
Police clashed with students in the capital Santiago on Wednesday night after a national protest on Wednesday.
The violence was among the worst seen in Chile since the demonstrations began in 2011, the BBC's Gideon Long reports from Santiago.
The country's powerful student movement has staged major demonstrations over the past two years demanding free and improved education.
Sporadic school and university takeovers have been part of the campaign.
'Order restored'
On Thursday, police launched pre-dawn raids on more than 20 schools across Santiago, where students had barricaded themselves in with tables and chairs. Local media broadcast footage of officers bursting into the buildings.
Interior Minister Andres Chadwick later said security forces had "restored order", adding that most of the evictions had been peaceful.
"As dialogue didn't yield expected results, and given that we are 72 hours away from the start of the primaries, as the government we had the obligation to avoid any disturbances," he said.
The raids came after a day and night of violence in Santiago.
More than 100 people were arrested and 10 police officers were injured after the city-wide demonstration, which drew tens of thousands of students, teachers and unionists.
Violence erupted when masked youths began to throw stones and Molotov cocktails at security forces who responded with tear gas and water cannon.
Although Chile's education system is regarded by many as one of the best in Latin America, students argue it is deeply unfair.
They say middle-class students have access to some of the best schooling in the region, while the poor have to be content with under-funded state schools. The country has no free universities.
The campaign for educational reform is the biggest protest movement Chile has seen since the return to democracy in 1990.
有片
http://www.bbc.co.uk/news/world-latin-america-23088201
[#0000CD]七一佔中[/size=6][/#0000CD]
呢啲先係抗爭


呢啲先係抗爭
重點係中學生,有個summary [/size=6]
The police launched the raids in the early hours of the morning,[#008000] clearing away chairs and tables that the pupils had used to barricade themselves inside.[/#008000] [#FF0000]The students took over the schools earlier this month as part of their two-year campaign for education reform. [/#FF0000]
But on Sunday, they'll be used as polling stations. Chileans are due to elect candidates for November's presidential election. Many of those arrested in the pre-dawn raids are children and are unlikely to be charged.
The police action followed a day and night of violence in Santiago, centred around a student march. More than 100 people were arrested when the march ended in clashes between[#0000CD] youths throwing stones and Molotov cocktails[/#0000CD], and police, who responded with tear gas and water cannon. Ten police officers were injured.
The clashes continued overnight. Protesters set fire to a bus, gutting it completely. The violence was among the worst in Chile in two years of protests against the centre-right government of President Sebastian Piñera.

有片,警察同學生爆發衝突[/size=6]
http://www.bbc.co.uk/news/world-latin-america-23088257
http://www.bbc.co.uk/news/world-latin-america-23088257
中文媒體報導較少,所以引用BBC 較多,請見諒[/size=6]
中文媒體報導較少,所以引用BBC 較多,請見諒[/size=6][/quote]
巴打Doesn't matter 當學吓英文
[#0000CD]七一佔中[/size=6][/#0000CD][/quote]
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