Tens of thousands gathered Saturday in the Romanian capital Bucharest
for a second straight day after more than 450 people were hurt and
around 30 arrested in a huge anti-corruption protest.
Police came in for criticism after they used water cannon and tear gas
on Friday to disperse protesters calling on the leftwing government to
resign.
Many demonstrators needed treatment after inhaling pepper spray and tear
gas, while others suffered blows, hospital sources said.
Around 30 police were also injured, 11 of whom were taken to hospital.
Massive crowds gathered in downtown Bucharest on Saturday night, watched
by security forces as they chanted: "Down with the government" and
"Justice, not corruption".
"I came after seeing what happened on Friday on television -- the
brutality of the police against peaceful people," said Floarea Toader,
64, the national yellow, blue and red flag draped across her shoulders.
"My children work in Spain and they would like to come back. But for now
that's not possible as the politicians are only interested in
themselves and do nothing for anyone else."
Around four million people have left the country -- one of the European
Union's poorest -- in the last 15 years, seeking a better life than that
offered by Romania's average monthly wage of just 520 euros ($590).
Police rejected criticism from the centre-right opposition that its
officers had used excessive force on Friday, saying its response to
violence by dozens of protesters had been "gradual and proportionate".
- Criticism of violence -
Austrian Chancellor Sebastian Kurz, whose country currently holds the EU
rotating presidency, criticised the violence, in which a cameraman for
Austria's public broadcaster was also hurt.
"We strongly condemn the violent clashes in Bucharest where numerous
demonstrators and journalists were injured. We expect full
explanations," he said on Twitter.
Local media said up to 80,000 people had taken to the streets, among
them many Romanian expatriates who returned home to show their anger at
the graft in one of the EU's most corruption-plagued member states.
About 1,000 officers in riot gear intervened to clear the crowds
assembled in a central square outside the main government building after
some protesters tried to break through the police cordon.
Eugene, a 62-year-old construction worker, travelled specially to
Bucharest on Friday to protest at what he said was "endemic corruption".
"But things quickly turned bad: they fired tear gas at us, it was unbearable."
Another demonstrator, Madalina, 22, said of Friday's clashes: "We
couldn't breathe and we had to seek shelter in the surrounding streets."
Romania's centre-right President Klaus Iohannis, a critic of the
government, said he "strongly condemned the brutal intervention of the
police, which was disproportionate to the attitude of most
demonstrators" but added that "any form of violence is unacceptable".
Prime Minister Viorica Dancila, in turn, accused Iohannis of "inciting the population against the authorities".
- Waves of protests -
In a controversial move last month, Romania sacked top anti-graft
prosecutor Laura Codruta Kovesi -- considered a symbol of the country's
fight against corruption.
With Kovesi at the helm, the Anti-Corruption Prosecutor's Office (DNA)
had led a crackdown on corruption among local and national elected
officials, earning the enmity of many in Romania's political class and
prompting critics to accuse it of abuse of power.
Before Kovesi's sacking, thousands of protesters took to the streets in
support of her. There have also been long-running waves of protests
against judicial reforms -- at their peak drawing an estimated half a
million people nationwide in February 2017.
https://www.geezgo.com/sps/34543
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