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Violence breaks out amid street protests in Chile

Violence erupted on the streets of Chile’s capital and other cities Tuesday as tens of thousands of students staged another protest demanding changes in public education.

SANTIAGO, Chile — Violence erupted on the streets of Chile’s capital and other cities Tuesday as tens of thousands of students staged another protest demanding changes in public education.

Masked demonstrators burned cars and barricades, looted storefronts and threw furniture at police in Santiago.

Some attacked an apartment building, throwing rocks and breaking windows.

Riot police used tear gas and tanks with water cannons to push them back.

By nightfall, at least 273 protesters were detained, including 73 in Santiago, and 23 police officers were injured, said Rodrigo Ubilla, a deputy interior minister.

Five days after a banned march ended in nearly 900 arrests, students and teachers marched peacefully in Santiago and elsewhere in Chile on Tuesday, calling for the government to increase spending on schooling and provide “free and equal” public education.

As in previous demonstrations, protesters danced, sang, wore costumes and waved signs.

But then groups of masked protesters split off and tried to break through police barricades blocking the way to the presidential palace.

University of Chile student president Camila Vallejos said 150,000 marched on sidestreets in the capital because the government again denied them permission to march on the main avenue. Ubilla estimated that between 70,000 and 80,000 marched in Santiago.

Vallejos said the huge showing so soon after Thursday’s confrontations “reaffirms the level of approval we have and that the people keep supporting us.

“It’s the government that isn’t capable of conceding.”

Interior Minister Rodrigo Hinzpeter said the violence shows student leaders can’t control their demonstrators.

As the day wore on, the violence spread, with hooded and masked activists throwing rocks, paint, furniture and street signs at police backed by armoured vehicles.

The unrest has gripped Chile for more than two months.

High school and university students have refused to attend class, taken over schools and staged demonstrations to press their demand for fundamental changes in how Chile finances public education.

Of particular concern, they say, is that private universities enjoying non-profit tax status aren’t reinvesting their revenues in educational improvements as required by law.

The current system also leaves underfunded municipalities in charge of high school education nationwide. This has starved most schools of resources, while leaving some wealthy neighbourhood schools well off. Chile’s small upper class sends its children to private schools or even overseas for their education.

Teachers union president Jaime Gajardo reiterated the students’ call for a national referendum on their demands, an idea that leaders of the governing centre-right coalition have dismissed as unconstitutional and dangerous.

Student leaders called on supporters to keep up the pressure through the night, spreading word on social networks to hold more pot-banging protests known as “cacerolazos.”