COVID-19 Lockdown: Anger In Spain, Violent Protests, PM Calls For Calm

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  • Several arrests, injuries in Madrid, Barcelona, other cities

  • Looting in LogroƱo over curfew

  • Health authorities confirm 1.19m cases, 35,878 deaths

Madrid on Saturday night

Anger boiled over in Spain at the weekend as some protesters led by far-left groups and ‘far-right elements’ went haywire against government’s decision to declare a six-month state of emergency in response to rising fresh infections of Coronavirus in the country.

Spain remains one of the hardest hit countries in western Europe by COVID-19. As at Friday evening, the country had recorded 1,185,678 cases with reports of about 35,878 deaths.

An anguished Prime Minister, Pedro SĆ”nchez, is appealing for countrywide calm; calling for an end to ā€œthe violent and irrational behaviourā€ of a minority of people after angry demonstrations in cities across the nation.

SƔnchez, who secured parliamentary support earlier this week for the six-month state of emergency, appealed for calm and solidarity.

ā€œOnly through responsibility, unity and sacrifice will we be able to beat this pandemic that is ravaging every country,ā€ he tweeted on Saturday night.

He warned that; ā€œThe violent and irrational behaviour of minority groups is intolerable. This isn’t the way.ā€

Reports indicated that 32 people were arrested and 12 injured in Madrid on Saturday night after a protest over the region’s midnight to 6am curfew turned violent, with rubbish bins set alight on the city’s Gran VĆ­a and skirmishes with police.

Also, there were protests in Barcelona, MƔlaga, Vitoria, Valencia, Santander and Burgos.

Police in LogroƱo, the capital of the La Rioja region, arrested six people on Saturday night after bins were torched and some shops smashed and looted.

Videos showed shop windows being broken and large crowds of people running from riot policemen. One shop owner in the city said she had lost stock and money to the looters.

ā€œThey broke three display windows, ransacked them and half the shop, broke mannequins, helped themselves to the clothes racks, ripped off the computer and took money from the cash till,ā€ Cristina PĆ©rez told local television.

However, on Sunday morning groups of young people from the city took to the streets to begin clearing up the previous night’s mess and debris.

President of the Madrid region, who has clashed with SƔnchez and accused the central government of overstepping its powers, also called for responsibility.

ā€œThe people sowing chaos on the streets are not those most vulnerable to the virus, nor are they the ones fighting for their lives,ā€ said Isabel DĆ­az Ayuso, adding; ā€œThey are organised groups looking to take advantage of the situation and people’s fears.ā€

Though the protests have been led by far-left groups, Spanish Police believe some of the demonstrations have involved ā€œfar-right elementsā€.

The far-right Vox party, which has bitterly criticised the Socialist-led government’s handling of the pandemic, has done little to defuse tensions.

Its leader, Santiago Abascal, said; ā€œthere are more reasons than ever to protest against this government which is ruining usā€, and called on the police to protect the right to protest but blamed the violence on ā€œthe far leftā€.

The state of emergency allows Spain’s regional governments to order an overnight curfew to run from 11pm to 6am, or to begin and finish an hour earlier or later. The only area of Spain exempt from the curfew is the Canary Islands because of what SĆ”nchez has termed ā€œthe very positive epidemiological situation thereā€.

The state of emergency also permits Spain’s regional governments to bring in full or partial lockdowns, and limits public and private gatherings to six people. With The Guardian reports

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