Philippine police van runs over protesters

Protesters lie on the ground after being hit by a police van during a rally in front of the US embassy in Manila on October 19, 2016. A Philippine police van on October 19 rammed and ran over baton-wielding protesters outside the US embassy in Manila. / AFP PHOTO / STR
Protesters lie on the ground after being hit by a police van during a rally in front of the US embassy in Manila on October 19, 2016.
A Philippine police van on October 19 rammed and ran over baton-wielding protesters outside the US embassy in Manila. / AFP PHOTO / STR

 

MANILA, Philippines | AFP | — A Philippine police van on Wednesday rammed and ran over baton-wielding protesters outside the US embassy in Manila.

Police used tear gas and truncheons to try to disperse hundreds of people who had gathered in support of President Rodrigo Duterte’s recent comments that he wanted to loosen his nation’s alliance with the United States.

A total of 23 protesters were arrested, said Chief Inspector Arsenio Riparip, one of the officers overseeing the incident.

He said the protesters broke through the line of police securing the embassy’s gates.

“We had to disperse them. They started it. They were trying to enter the embassy,” Riparip told AFP.

“We had to use tear gas. They overpowered our policemen.”

A police van reversed quickly back into a crowd of dozens of protesters and then forward, running over at least two people and banging into others, footage broadcast by local television network showed.

Photos showed a grey-haired man afterwards trapped underneath the stationary van, with his leg and hips under one of the back tires.

Manila police chief Oscar Albayalde confirmed the police van hit protesters but insisted the driver was not at fault.

“They weren’t really run over,” Albayalde said in a statement, referring to the protesters.

“The rallyists were trying to flip over the patrol car. In the process, the driver extricated the patrol car and inadvertently hit some unruly protesters who sustained minor injuries.”

One of the protest leaders, Amirah Lidasan, accused the police of starting the violence.

“It was the police who attacked the protesters. First they rammed the police vehicle against the people. Then they released tear gas and hit us with truncheons,” she said.

While the Philippines is a defense ally of the United States, Duterte — elected president in May on a ruthless anti-crime platform — has said he wants to distance the country from America.

He has launched tirades against US President Barack Obama and warned he may eventually cut ties altogether, after the US government raised alarm over thousands of people killed in Duterte’s anti-drug campaign.

Duterte is currently in Beijing on a mission aimed at improving ties with China and attracting billions of dollars of Chinese investment.

str-mm/kma/amj/sm

© 1994-2016 Agence France-Presse