No menu items!

COSTA RICA'S LEADING ENGLISH LANGUAGE NEWSPAPER

HomeArchiveOne killed as riot police break up Panama protests

One killed as riot police break up Panama protests

At least one protester was killed and an unknown number wounded Sunday when riot police swept in to clear roads that indigenous activists had been blocking for nearly a week.

Members of the Ngobe-Bugle indigenous group  are demanding that legislation being debated in Congress include a ban on mining and hydroelectric dams in their ancestral territory.

Police protected by heavy shields Sunday fired tear gas to break up protests in Chiriquí province, on the border with Costa Rica, and Veraguas province in western Panama.

Riot police was ordered in after representatives of President Ricardo Martinelli’s government failed to meet native negotiators at talks Saturday sponsored by the Catholic Church.

Public Security Minister José Raul Mulino confirmed that one person had died, but claimed that police were not responsible.

“The anti-riot units only have equipment to control crowds and do not carry lethal weapons, therefore that person could not have died from any of the shots” fired by police, he told Telemetro TV channel.

Omayra Silvera, one of the native leaders, told radio RPC that the activists were “peacefully expressing our views” when the police charged them in Chiriquí.

Police fired on protesters with support from a helicopter, a priest in the Chriquí town of Tole said. “They fired bullets, shot and tear gas,” said Carlos de la Cruz, adding that he drove three injured protesters to the hospital.

Mulino rejected the priest’s account, and accused the protesters of setting the police station in the town of San Felix on fire, attempting to attack another police station, and of looting a bank branch.

“Police have nearly cleared out 100 percent of the highway,” Mulino said. “The important thing is that traffic is beginning to flow, and the police are cleaning the highway of debris.”

Protesters blocked key highways linking Panama with its neighbors with boulders, tree trunks and debris starting on Jan. 30. The protests have stranded hundreds of people, including Costa Rica tourists, and stopped trucks from delivering food to Panama City and other regions.

Trending Now

Costa Rica Makes Global Top 16 for North Americans Moving Abroad

Costa Rica has landed on a new international list of the most sought-after places for North Americans who want to live abroad, as demand...

Costa Rica Sends Rescue Mission to Venezuela After Devastating Earthquakes

Costa Rica has sent a rescue and humanitarian mission to Venezuela after two powerful earthquakes left widespread damage, collapsed buildings and an urgent need...

Costa Rica’s Largest Police Operation Hit Cahuita — Here’s What It Means If You’re Headed There

If you're planning a trip to Cahuita or Puerto Viejo de Talamanca, own property along Limón's south Caribbean coast, or even live there, you've...

Venezuela Earthquake Death Toll Tops 160 as Costa Rica Pledges Aid

The death toll from the twin earthquakes that struck Venezuela yesterday climbed to at least 164 by this morning, with nearly 1,000 people injured,...

U.S. Lawmakers Urge Release of Salvadoran Lawyer Ruth López

Nine Democratic members of the U.S. Congress sent a letter to Secretary of State Marco Rubio asking him to press for the immediate release...

Inside the Pecho de Rata Fortune and a Trunk Full of Cash

In his own recorded telling, it played out like a doting grandfather's anecdote. Edwin López Vega — the alleged narcotrafficking kingpin known across the...

Honduras Macaw Rescue Effort Draws Attention to Narco Threats

A new report from The Nation has put international attention on a remote corner of eastern Honduras, where Indigenous Miskito guardians are protecting the...

Costa Rica Seeks Interpol Help After Suspects Leave Before Raids

Costa Rican authorities have turned to Interpol to locate two women linked by investigators to the Riverside case, including the wife of extradited alleged...

Costa Rica Debt Plan Prompts Warnings Over Dollar and Public Finances

A group of Costa Rican economists is warning that the government’s plan to issue up to $13.5 billion in eurobonds is excessive, unnecessary in...
Avatar
🌴 The Weekly Pura Vida

Costa Rica, Once a Week

The week's top stories, weather & insider tips — delivered every Sunday. One email, zero clutter.

🔒 Free. No spam. Unsubscribe anytime.

Loading…

Latest News from Costa Rica

Costa Rica Coffee Maker Chorreador
Costa Rica Car Rentals
Costa Rica Travel Insurance
Costa Rica Travel