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Dublin: 10 °C Thursday 20 June, 2013

In photos: Six demonstrators hospitalised after Madrid clashes

Six people were hospitalised and several arrested in yesterday after police fired rubber bullets at crowds demonstrating against severe new austerity measures.

Image: PA

SPANISH MINERS AND sympathisers incensed with the nation’s seemingly endless austerity cutbacks clashed with riot police on one of Madrid’s most famed avenues Wednesday, and six demonstrators were hospitalised after police fired rubber bullets. Police made seven arrests, and two officers were injured.

The miners’ march into the capital was the culmination for some of a nearly three-week trek from the remote regions where they eke out a living, and drew heavy sympathy from Spaniards weary of a series of government-imposed measures that have increased taxes, made it easier to fire workers and reduced cherished government services.

Some miners walked from northern and eastern mining regions into Madrid, where they received a hero’s welcome by thousands lining La Castellana avenue outside the Industry Ministry building.

Fireworks, rocks and rubber bullets

The miners detonated deafening fireworks as they marched, then hurled them at the police riot vans guarding the ministry, which oversees the mining industry. Police fired rubber bullets at the ground as a warning, and opened fire on the protesters after they threw more fireworks and rocks and bottles at officers, witnesses said.

Most demonstrators fled to side streets for safety after the violence began, but a police spokeswoman said 22 demonstrators and 10 officers were treated for injuries by emergency workers. Six of the protesters and two of the officers were taken to hospitals, said the spokeswoman, who was unable to provide their conditions and spoke on condition of anonymity because of department policy.

The violent end to Wednesday’s protest in Madrid is still a relatively rare event in Spain. While there have been sporadic street clashes at Spanish demonstrations as Europe’s financial crisis worsened over the last several years, the country has largely been spared the violence seen in places like bailed-out Greece.

In photos: Six demonstrators hospitalised after Madrid clashes
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    A demonstrator bleeds as she is detained by the riot police during a coal miners's march to the Minister of Industry building in Madrid, Wednesday, July 11, 2012. Coal miners angered by huge cuts in subsidies converged on Madrid for protest rallies after walking nearly three weeks under the blazing sun from the pits where they eke out a living. (AP Photo/Andres Kudacki)
  • Spain

    Demonstrators clash with riot police during the coal miner's march to the Minister of Industry's building in Madrid, Wednesday, July 11, 2012. The miners' march into the capital was the culmination for some of a nearly three-week trek: miners who walked 18 days from northern and eastern mining regions were received as heroes on Tuesday night as they entered the Puerta del Sol, one of the city's main plazas. (AP Photo/Andres Kudacki)
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    Demonstrators clash with riot police during the coal miner's march to the Minister of Industry's building in Madrid, Wednesday, July 11, 2012. (AP Photo/Andres Kudacki)
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    Demonstrators throw bananas at riot police during a coal miners march to the Minister of Industry building in Madrid. (AP Photo/Andres Kudacki)
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    Retired miner from Asturias, Olvidio Gonzalez, 67, is helped by friends after been hit in his leg by a rubber bullet, during clashes with riot police near the Spain's Industry Ministry after a march in Madrid, Wednesday July 11, 2012. Riot police fired rubber bullets Wednesday at Spanish coal miners protesting in the streets of Madrid over subsidy cuts they fear will jeopardize their meager livelihood. (AP Photo/Alan Clendenning)
  • Spain

    A miner sings during the coal miners march to the Minister of Industry building in Madrid, Wednesday, July 11, 2012. (AP Photo/Andres Kudacki)
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    Miners and demonstrators walk during the coal miners's march to the Minister of Industry's building . (AP Photo/Andres Kudacki)
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    Demonstrators and the police clash. (AP Photo/Andres Kudacki)
  • Spain

    Coal miners have been angered by huge cuts in subsidies. (AP Photo/Andres Kudacki)
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    Demonstrators shout slogans condemning recent austerity measures announced by the Spanish government during a demonstrations in Madrid, Spain, Wednesday, July 11, 2012. Spain's government imposed more austerity measures on the beleaguered country Wednesday as it unveiled sales tax hikes and spending cuts aimed at shaving €65 billion off the state budget over the next two and a half years. (AP Photo/Emilio Morenatti)
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    Demonstrators try to flee in clashes with riot police during the coal miners's march to the Minister of Industry's building. (AP Photo/Andres Kudacki)
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    Riot police stand behind bananas thrown by protesters. (AP Photo/Andres Kudacki)

‘They started to fire indiscriminately’

Retired miner Olvidio Gonzalez winced in pain as he lay on a stone bench, a huge, round, bloody welt marking the spot where a rubber bullet hit him.

“We were walking peacefully to get to where the union leaders were speaking and they started to fire indiscriminately,” said Gonzalez, 67. “There was no warning.”

But protester Santiago Oviedo, 24, a physics masters candidate, said he saw protesters hurling fireworks, bottles, cans and rocks at police outside the ministry and that the protesters threw more objects after officers fired at the ground.

The volleys then fired by officers at protesters sent many running into side streets. Some people were beaten by officers wielding batons, and Oviedo said he saw at least 10 people hit by rubber bullets.

Biting new austerity measures revealed

The protest came just hours after Spanish Prime Minister Mariano Rajoy imposed a new sales tax hike and other spending cuts aimed at eliminating €65 billion in spending from the nation’s budget over the next two and a half years. The country already has the highest unemployment rate in the 17-nation eurozone — nearly 25 per cent — and is in its second recession in three years.

The miners, wearing hardhats and carrying walking sticks, had snaked along the avenue under a hot sun to protest a 63 percent cut in subsidies to mining companies imposed by the government as it tries to reduce a bloated deficit.

Miner David Menendez said he has worked in the pits for 10 years and fears losing his job in an economy that offers few prospects for anything else.

“I’m here to defend my work,” Menendez said, wearing a miner’s hard hat and a black T-shirt that said “Proud to be a Miner.”

As for the new austerity cuts, the 30-year-old Menendez accused Rajoy of “committing crimes against the economy and killing it. It’s just cuts and more cuts.”

The new spending reductions include a new wage cut for government workers and members of Parliament and a fresh wave of closures at state-owned companies. As miners approached the ministry building, some encouraged riot police to join them in the demonstration since officers will make less money.

‘We have to protest to stop the madness’

Joining the miners were Madrid residents who related to the miners’ plight because they also have suffered under the austerity cuts brought on by Europe’s financial crisis and a Spanish property boom that went bust, prompting the country to seek a bailout of its hurting banks from a €100 billion lifeline approved by the eurozone nations.

Marcher Pepi Garcia said she makes €900 per month but is supporting her 35-year-old daughter and 21-year-old son still living in her home because they are unemployed and have never landed jobs lasting more than six months.

“I’m not here just to show solidarity,” said Garcia, a 52-year-old hotel waitress. “We have to protest to stop the madness that is happening in Spain.”

While Spain is expected to ask for tens of billions of euros to prop up banks that lent too freely during the property boom, she said her children “can’t even think about getting their own apartments or starting families” because of the country’s miserable economy.

Alejandro Casal, 28, an Airbus factory worker marching with fellow union members, said the miners’ protest “isn’t only their struggle. It’s a struggle for the working class.”

“The people need to be here on the street to say ‘Enough is enough,’” he said.

Retired miner Gonzalez said he blamed Rajoy for Spain’s deepening problems, including unemployment for two of his four grown children.

“He promised he wouldn’t touch our health care or education or raise taxes. The reality is everything is falling apart,” Gonzalez said. “What’s happening here is like a dictatorship, it’s unjust and I am so angry.”

Read: Spain announces a further €65bn in cuts>

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Comments (46 Comments)

  • Ireland would never protest like this!

    Reply
  • Not every German person is “thrifty and hardworking”. Some are hardworking, some are lazy. Some are careful with money, some have designer sunglasses. We are used to having less money than many people in other countries, because our average wages are lower than many other EU countries. Many people here would like very much not to have to be “thrifty and hardworking”. “thrifty and hardworking” sometimes only means “poor and overworked”.

    Reply
    • The German people are a nice, friendly, fun loving people. They are feeding me right and keeping me well. I ask my people to do what the German’s ask of them, they are a noble and dignified master ra… people. Angela Merkel is a great man, he has a plan and the brains and know how to achieve a new, united Europe, free from idiocy and ineptitude. The time for playing around in our little countries is over, we’ve had our fun and now is the time for hard work and thriftiness. Tell my family I miss them but I am much happier here in the Fatherland, I will be home for Christmas which has been rescheduled and will occur between 20:30 – 22:00 on April 20 in the year 2018. Cabhair, iad a dhó mo chosa!
      Deutschland ist schön.

      Reply
    • Thank you for insulting me and my nationality. Maybe you would now like to tell me to go back to my own people and that I am personally responsible for your economic problem. If a German person wrote something like this joke about Irish people, he/she would be attacked from every corner. This is bigotry hidden inside comedy.

      Reply
    • Jaysus Larry, WTF was that??? You’re an embarrassment.

      Reply
    • Karswell 12/07/12 #

      And it is people like Larry that will make sure that any recovery will be crippled at every turn. Worse than useless and a waste of air.

      Reply
    • Karswell 12/07/12 #

      And yet Larry receives green thumbs. Is this really the state on the nation? If Larry represents the common opinion, we might as well give up trying and leave the land to the beasts, let them tear themselves the pieces.

      Reply
  • Now why can’t Irish people be as passionate as the Spanish. Hate seeing the violence but sometimes it cannot be avoided. Ppl are frustrated at the failings of government

    Reply
    • But what good will it do? You can be as passive or aggressive as you like, it won’t make a difference to the situation we have found ourselves in.

      Personally I would prefer to just make the best of what we have and get on with things.

      Reply
    • @steph
      That attitude is the surest guarantee there is that ordinary people will continue to get reamed, reamed and reamed again by the goons who call the shots.

      Reply
  • Why the bananas? Anyone else curious? Surely they don’t want to end up in court with John Terry?

    Reply
    • The bananas were given to a group of marcher as a gesture of solidarity by a fruit seller and they decided to throw them when other demonstrators began tossing more standard munitions such as rockets glass and rocks.

      Reply
  • What we got here…is a failure…to communicate….

    Reply
  • Marching….pffft… creating Facebook pages….pfffft. protesting in tents…..pfffft. what you need is bombs going off under cars and tiger kidnappings with some burning and looting….. then people will really listen and if they dont well you keep on doing it… Like the Cork lads who over took the Nama Buildings and made their own place out of it… thats how you do it. Send letters to your local TD all you want and agree with Vincent Browne and put the odd comment in The Journal but the wheels keep on churning away.
    The People of Iceland Rock by the way.

    You’ll never beat the Icelandics…!!!!! (repeat several times)

    Reply
    • Karswell 12/07/12 #

      Violence is not a viable option. The use of violence by protestors will only result in justifying the use of violence against protestors.

      But you already know this and are simply attempting to provoke a response, not so?

      Reply
  • quick question what positive impact has our new government brought introduced or rectified since taking term?
    i’d like to know your answers before you thumbs down and continue to live as a sheep

    Reply
    • Karswell 12/07/12 #

      A more pertinent question would be what alternative government, or alternative path for this government, can you offer to us. Grumbling without action is very easy but achieves nothing.

      You criticise others for being sheep, but, unless you offer alternatives, you are not in any way different. A belligerent sheep is still a sheep.

      Reply
  • KENNY 12/07/12 #

    The people who are protesting violently are mainly anarchists etc. They do not represent main stream Spanish society. Like the dame street protesters

    Reply
    • Sweeping statement there Kenny. I’d say as in every protest there are some anarchists otherwise most would be part of main stream Spanish society. You know those who are unemployed and are seeing their benefits and living standards dropping.

      Reply
    • I’d say that girl in the first pic is, she doesn’t quite look like a miner to me.

      Reply
    • There was a 67yo guy there shot with a rubber bullet, cant he have brought support say from a daughter?! Cant imagine him being a closet anarchist! Protest marches such as this arnt solely for the miners, support is gathering all over Europe. And once the men in black don the heavy boots and protective clothing they get stick happy.

      Reply
    • Yeah but I bet that scarf that looks like a great way to conceal ones identity was only around her neck incase she got a chill from the cold weather.

      Reply
    • Not 100% true, but I’d suggest that there’s no love lost between the northern and other regions and Madrid. This could explain the violence….

      Reply
  • Peter 12/07/12 #

    Spain = failed socialist state

    Reply
    • A couple of things.

      Spain is not a socialist state.

      Spain has not failed as a state.

      Besides that the rest of your statement, i.e. Spain being a state, is correct.

      Reply
    • How come every time a country shows up with problems these days it’s all of a sudden socialist??
      Unrestrained capitalism caused these problems, not socialism.

      Reply
    • First comment of yours I thumbed up Too Trueleft

      Reply
    • every socialist state = a failed state, socialism doesnt and will never work

      Reply
    • @ Stephen Church – there is, and never has been, a socialist state. There certainly have been states that claimed to be socialist, but what a state is and what it claims to be are two different things. All “socialist” states that have ever existed have restricted political influence from the masses by imposing, amongst many policies, a singular political party. Take a look at the Democratic People’s Republic of Korea. It’s not democratic. The people have no influence, so it’s not a People’s government. And it’s not a Republic as the leader and the majority of those with power are not elected. True socialism includes true democracy. Having said that, I am no lover of socialism, irrespective of variety (be it Marxism, Leninism, Trotskyism, Stalinism, Titoism, Maoism, etc.)

      Reply
  • Sure isn’t nationalising private banks and losses a socialist action. Ron Paul wouldn’t do that.

    Reply
  • I have seen many “peaceful demonstrations” attacked by the powers that be… so meeting violence with violence is not a new concept. Its been around since man could walk upright. So i’m not really trying to provoke anything. If someone has a baton and is prepared to use it against me..well then i should be prepared to carry a baton and use it also.

    “Religion is excellent stuff for keeping common people quiet.
    Religion is what keeps the poor from murdering the rich.”
    Napoleon Bonaparte

    Reply
  • You can’t really expect any sympathy when you pick a fight with the cops. Also can these countries not just take it on the chin and carry on like we have some people say sheep. However, I think it shows a higher sense of resolve and purpose just getting on with things. Grow up Spain.

    Reply
  • a bunch of moaners in spain picked a fight with the police and lost. Hardly news.

    Reply
  • If we had let the banks fail like Iceland we would be fine but its too late now , Get on with things and accept our lot.

    Reply
    • It might be easier to accept our lot if we could see those who were the main engineers in bring Ireland to its knees being held accountable for their actions. There are a number of bankers, developers, politicians and senior civil / public servants who need to be made in public to account for their actions / inaction’s and suffer some sort of consequence be that removal of pensions or porridge time.

      Reply
    • Greedy people who overspent and took out loans & mortgages they couldn’t afford? I agree those people shouldn’t be helped out by the government spending more tax money on them whilst useful services like healthcare, education and social services suffer. Yes we need to live within our means we always had to.

      Reply
    • Ryan could you just read your contribution once more…support is gathering all over Europe. For what?
      Visit Madrid any evening of the week and watch the way these people party seven nights of the week into the small hours and you will then get to see the unreality. Spain has tried to behave like the wealthier countries to the North over the past fifteen to twenty years and it has caught up on them. It doesn’t matter how or where you apportion blame but in the end it is the Spanish that have to pay. Why should a pensioner in Oslo or Dublin or Yonkers have to see his investments and his pension collapse just because the Spaniards want to walk away from their sovereign responsibilities. Why should the thrifty and hardworking German working in a Freiburg factory have to pay more taxes so his Government can repay the debts of an island like ours which is living way beyond its means and overpaying everyone from doctors , nurses, lawyers , and the unemployed.
      Live by the Overdraft and suffer from the consequences.

      Reply
    • @ Mark – I am German. I party sometimes, not every day. But beer is cheap here. I have been in Spain. My friends there also party, but not 7 nights a week. This I think is normal, in any country. I do not think that too often partying is the main cause for the EZ crisis. What is special about Freiburg?

      Reply
  • I’d say thats fake blood on that girl in the picture

    Reply
  • Cpm 12/07/12 #

    That creature in the first picture, be it female or male, is most unusual looking. There was a picture of her/him in the Metro this morning, I was fixated on it.

    Reply

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