More Puerto Rico protests planned as governor resists calls to resign
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[July 19, 2019]
SAN JUAN (Reuters) - Massive and at
times violent protests in Puerto Rico showed no sign of stopping as
labor unions on Thursday organized a Friday march to keep up pressure on
the governor to resign, while dozens of guns were stolen in a raid on
police firearms center.
Thousands of protesters have jammed streets in San Juan since Saturday,
calling on Governor Ricardo Rossello to step down after the leak of a
raft of controversial and vulgar text messages between him and his
closest allies. The scandal comes on the heels of a federal probe into
government corruption on the bankrupt island.
The guns were stolen from a police station in the coastal city of
Guayama, which was vandalized with graffiti calling for the governor to
resign or face bullets, according to a Thursday police statement. The
FBI was investigating, it said.
The political turmoil comes at a critical stage in the U.S. territory's
bankruptcy. It has also raised concerns with U.S. lawmakers who are
weighing the island's requests for billions of federal dollars for
healthcare and for recovery efforts following devastating hurricanes in
2017.
"Like never before, all factions of the country agree that Ricardo
Rossello has to go," Juan Cortés, president of the Central Federation of
Workers, a public- and private-sector union, said in a statement.
Rossello said on Thursday he continued to ask for forgiveness for what
he has called "improper" but not illegal acts on his part, while
affirming his commitment to remain in office.
"I recognize the enormous challenge I have before me due to the recent
controversies, but I firmly believe that we can restore trust and, after
this painful and shameful process, achieve reconciliation,” he said in a
statement.
Two top officials in Rossello's administration, who had participated in
the governor's group chat, resigned on Saturday following the release by
Puerto Rico journalist group Centro de Periodismo Investigativo of 889
pages of text messages. They showed how Rossello and his closest
advisers exchanged memes, comments that were derogatory, misogynistic
and homophobic, as well as privileged information in a Telegram group
chat.
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Demonstrators chant, sing, and wave Puerto Rican flags while a
masked man stands in silence with his right hand in the air during
the sixth day of protest calling for the resignation of Governor
Ricardo Rossello in San Juan, Puerto Rico July 18, 2019.
REUTERS/Gabriella N. Baez
Last week, U.S. authorities announced indictments involving six
people, including two former high-ranking Puerto Rico government
officials, who were charged with conspiracy and other crimes in
connection with millions of dollars in federal Medicaid and
education funds.
Wednesday's protest, the biggest so far, included singer and actor
Ricky Martin and reggaeton artist Bad Bunny.
Rossello acknowledged that people have the right to protest, but he
chastised "a few" protesters who he said had clashed with and
injured police.
Citing "questionable riot-control practices," U.S. Representative
Nydia Velazquez, a New York Democrat, on Wednesday asked the U.S.
Justice Department to protect the civil rights of protesters on the
island by deploying personnel to "observe and document" local police
activity.
"It is my belief that the federal government must employ all
appropriate mechanisms to prevent and address grievances stemming
from alleged abusive practices," she said in a letter, adding she
was troubled by reports that federal immigration agents will be
involved in policing protests.
Meanwhile, a spokesman for Royal Caribbean Cruises Ltd <RCL.N>,
which canceled stops in San Juan for two ships this week, citing
"unrest" in Puerto Rico's capital city, said a third ship docked
there on Thursday.
(Reporting By Karen Pierog in Chicago, additional reporting by Luis
Valentin Ortiz in San Juan)
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