By ALEXANDER VILLEGAS Reuters
Share this story

VALPARAISO, Chile — Police tear gassed and hurled water from cannons at protesters in front of Chile’s national Congress in Valparaiso on Tuesday after a Senate commission delayed a vote on a controversial fishing law that seeks to redistribute quotas between artisanal and industrial fishers.

At least one police officer was injured and several people were detained after protesters knocked down a gate surrounding the building, attempting to enter Congress before being repelled by tear gas, water cannons and baton-wielding police in riot gear.

ADVERTISING


Reuters footage showed huge armored police vehicles spraying barrels of water at protesters carrying the Chilean flag.

Earlier in the day, a few thousand fishermen gathered at docks in Valparaiso to march to Congress to protest the law that they say favors a few industrial fishing companies. They carried banners that read “The Sea is Not For Sale,” in Spanish.

Hugo Poblete, a union leader for fishers in Quintero in central Chile, was one of the hundreds of fishermen gathered outside the building watching the Senate finance commission debate the new law on a large screen.

“The point being debated now is the fractioning, or percentages that each sector (artisanal and industrial) gets from different species,” Poblete said, adding that artisanal fishers had gotten a beneficial percentage when the law passed the lower house, including 70% for hake and 90% for cuttlefish, the two most important species for local small fishers.

Those percentages have been reduced as the bill made its way through the Senate, which artisanal fishers and unions view as favoring large industrial fishing companies, prompting them to protest. On Tuesday afternoon, the Senate commission agreed to postpone the vote and continue debate.

Police and protesters clashed soon after the decision, and police quickly tried to disperse protesters with tear gas and water cannons, prompting a group of protesters to fight back before riot police deployed in full force began detaining several protesters in the streets around Congress.

While debate continues tomorrow, the law can face further delays and legislative hurdles before it becomes law. Artisanal fishers say they’ll continue to fight for what they say are equitable fishing rights as they feel their way of life is dying out.