
Bishops support peaceful protestors, deplore the violent
Demonstrators burned two Catholic churches in Chile, where gatherings to mark the one-year anniversary of mass protests against inequality descended into chaos.
Church officials and media reports described the 18 October gatherings through the country as peaceful, but unrest broke out late in the day, with some protesters entering and vandalising parishes in Santiago, the national capital.
Videos posted on social media showed the spire of Our Lady of the Assumption Church in Santiago burning, then crashing to the ground as a nearby crowd cheered.
📹VIDEO | Chilean protesters burned 2 Catholic churches on the anniversary of last year’s anti-government demonstrations and ahead of a constitutional referendum. San Francisco de Borja and La Asuncion churches in Santiago de Chile were destroyed on Sunday. pic.twitter.com/OpGkCUZmrE
— EWTN News (@EWTNews) October 19, 2020
St Francis Borgia Church also was vandalised, and religious items were stolen, a church official said. The parish is home to institutional ceremonies for the ‘Carabineros’, Chile’s national police, a force unpopular with protesters over accusations of it employing repressive tactics, including 345 eye injuries from the use of pellets shot from anti-riot weapons, according to a UN report.
“These events over the past few hours in Santiago and other cities in Chile show that there are no limits to those that exacerbate violence,” the Chilean bishops’ conference said in an 18 October statement.
“These violent groups contrast with many others who have demonstrated peacefully. The vast majority of Chile yearns for justice and effective measures that help to overcome inequality. They do not want more corruption or abuse; they expect dignified, respectful and fair treatment.”

Archbishop Celestino Aós Braco of Santiago called for an end to the violence on 18 October, calling it evil and saying, “We cannot justify the unjustifiable”.
Chile erupted in protests in October 2019 after an increase in metro fares in the city of Santiago. But the small fare increase belied much deeper dissatisfaction with economic inequality in the country, which had been promoted in recent decades as a development success story with pro-market policies.

Chileans go to the polls on 25 October in a referendum on whether to rewrite the nation’s constitution, which was drafted during the 1973-1990 regime of General Augusto Pinochet.
Many of the protests have demanded rewriting the constitution; the bishops have encouraged citizen participation in the demonstrations.
“The citizenry that wants justice, probity, the overcoming of inequalities and opportunities to be able to pull ourselves up as a country will not be intimidated by threats of violence and will fulfill their civic duty,” the bishops’ statement said.
“In democracies, we express ourselves with free votes of conscience, not the pressures of terror and force.”
The assailing of two parishes comes as Chile’s Catholic Church suffers the fallout from accusations of clergy sexual abuse and the hierarchy’s improper response to such crimes. A January survey from polling firm Cadem found that 75 per cent of respondents disapprove of the church’s performance.
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