Scores of police raided a Lima college on Saturday, smashing down the gates with an armoured automobile, firing teargas and detaining greater than 200 individuals who had come to the Peruvian capital to participate in anti-government protests.
Images confirmed dozens of individuals mendacity face down on the bottom at San Marcos University after the shock police operation. Students informed the Guardian they had been pushed, kicked and hit with truncheons as they had been compelled out of their dormitories.
The police raid on San Marcos University – the oldest within the Americas – is the newest in a collection of affronts driving rising requires President Dina Boluarte to step down after six weeks of unrest that has claimed 60 lives, whereas leaving at the very least 580 injured and greater than 500 arrested.
The demonstrations started in early December in help of the ousted former president Pedro Castillo however have shifted overwhelmingly to demand Boluarte’s resignation, the closure of Congress and contemporary elections. Boluarte was Castillo’s vice-president and changed him after he tried to shutter congress and rule by decree on 7 December.
Many of these arrested in Saturday’s raid had travelled from southern Peru to the capital to participate in an indication final Thursday labelled the “takeover of Lima” which started peacefully however descended into working battles between protesters and riot police amid stone-throwing and swirls of teargas.
In an announcement on Twitter, the workplace of the UN excessive commissioner for human rights known as on the Peruvian authorities to “ensure the legality and proportionality of the [police] intervention and guarantees of due process”. It emphasised the significance of the presence of prosecutors, who had been absent for the primary hours of the raid.
Students residing in halls of residence stated they had been violently compelled out of their rooms by armed police who busted in doorways and used shoves and kicks to eject them.
Esteban Godofredo, a 20-year-old political science scholar, was given medical therapy for accidents to his leg. “He hit me with his stick and he threw me to the ground and started kicking me,” Godofredo informed the Guardian as he sat on the grass outdoors the residence with a closely bruised, bandaged proper calf.

Videos seen by the Guardian confirmed confused and terrified college students massed outdoors their halls, some nonetheless in pyjamas, as riot police shouted orders and insults. Young males had been compelled to face towards a wall or kneel in a row.
“They pointed their guns at us, and shouted ‘Out out.’ We didn’t even have time to get our IDs,” stated Jenny Fuentes, 20, a scholar trainer. “They forced us to kneel. Many of the girls were crying but they told us to shut up.”
“They didn’t tell us why we were being forced out of our rooms,” she stated. The group of about 90 college students, who had remained on campus through the summer time holidays to work and research, had been then marched to the primary patio, a 10-minute stroll, the place the opposite individuals had been detained.
Several hours after the raid, that they had not been allowed to return to their rooms which had been being searched by police.

“I have been a student at San Marcos [University] and since the 1980s we have not experienced such an outrage,” Susel Paredes, a congresswoman, informed the Guardian as she was prevented from getting into the campus by a police cordon.
“The police have entered the university residence, the rooms of the female students who had nothing to do with the demonstrators. They have threatened them and taken them out of their rooms while they were sleeping.”
Paredes stated it was a flashback to common police and armed forces raids on the general public college within the Eighties and 90s, when the campus was seen as a hotbed for subversion through the state’s battle with the Mao-inspired Shining Path rebels.
“We are not in that time, we are supposedly under a democratic government that should respect fundamental rights,” Paredes stated.
Amid the demonstrations and with roadblocks paralysing a lot of the nation, Peruvian authorities on Saturday ordered the closure “until further notice” of the Inca citadel of Machu Picchu and the Inca path that results in the world heritage archeological web site – Peru’s largest vacationer attraction which brings in additional than 1 million guests a yr.