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  • MEXICO: Riot police disperse leftist protesters in Mexican city of Oaxaca

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MEXICO: Riot police disperse leftist protesters in Mexican city of Oaxaca

Federal riot police backed by helicopters and armoured trucks seized control of Mexico's popular tourist city of Oaxaca on Sunday (October 29) after months of street protests, and one man was killed in the violence. Police carrying shields and wearing gas masks took over the colonial city's picturesque main square after hundreds of activists with metal poles and sticks surprisingly abandoned the plaza, their bastion for five months, without a fight. After a full day of breaking down burning barricades and clashing with protesters, police then quickly dismantled the shabby tent city the activists had set up in the square. A nurse was killed in another part of the city, and protesters said he was hit by a tear gas canister. A white sheet and a Mexican flag covered his body. Mexican President Vicente Fox ordered federal forces to seize the city, which striking teachers and activists have occupied since May to demand the state governor's resignation, after gunmen thought to be local police shot dead a U.S. journalist and two other people on Friday (October 27). The invasion began on Sunday morning as armoured trucks and flanked by riot police, destroyed barricades of burning tires, rocks and old furniture. They fired water cannon at anyone in their way into the city centre, protected by SWAT teams with assault rifles. Demonstrators fled in some areas but stood up for a fight in others. Hundreds surrounded six busloads of unarmed police, forced them to flee and then set fire to the buses. Several blocks from the city centre, dozens of demonstrators, many using goggles to protect their eyes from tear gas, waited behind a barricade of burning tyres, which sent plumes of thick smoke into the evening sky. Oaxaca is famous for its architecture, cuisine, indigenous crafts and archaeological ruins, but many tourists have been scared away in recent months as the protests, which began as a teachers strike in May, turned violent. The protesters accuse state Gov. Ulises Ruiz of corruption and repressive tactics, and had vowed not give up their occupation until he is removed. Although the crisis is over local issues, it has raised fears it could spark unrest elsewhere in the country, which was shaken by weeks of street protests after a fiercely contested presidential election in July. It is unusual for federal forces to be sent to conflicts in Mexican states, which are the jurisdiction of local police. A police spokesman said 4,000 police took part in the operation. The protesters have said Ruiz was behind recent shootings and accused him of corruption and repressing dissenters. About a dozen people, mostly protesters, have been killed since activists took to the streets in a bid to topple Ruiz, who blames the protesters for the violence. Fox has vowed to end the crisis before handing over power to President-elect Felipe Calderon of the conservative ruling party on Dec. 1.

ITN Source | October 30, 2006Watch more videos from ITN Source

Tags:. .helicopters. .gov. .crafts. .unusual. .poles











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