Violent Protests in Burgos Have Caught the Spanish Government's Attention

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Violent Protests in Burgos Have Caught the Spanish Government's Attention

They just sent in a load of riot police to help prevent "contagion".

Until three days ago, the town of Burgos in northern Spain was best known for a kind of blood sausage made with rice.

But, on Friday, it made the headlines for something even less palatable; a protest by a neighbourhood association against the building of a new avenue through the heart of Gamonal – one of its most traditionally working class districts – descended into violence. Roadworks were dug up for missiles, bank windows were smashed in and pitched battles were fought between the tracksuit-clad protesters and riot police drafted in from nearby Valladolid.

Annons

The first day of rioting resulted in 19 arrests and a handful of stories in the press. What no one expected was that the riots would continue for the next three days, turning the centre of the city into a no-go zone and prompting journalists who should really know better to throw the words "Homs" and "Aleppo" around like hyperbolic grenades.

Interestingly, as the protests have continued, the tone of the reports has changed. The first dispatches focused on cataloguing the arrests and acts of vandalism, but as the protests have gone on, the media’s initial incredulity at the fact that people anywhere could get so pissed off over some roadworks is gradually being replaced by an understanding that that’s exactly what's happening. And the playing out of local concerns on a national stage is not something to be sniffed at.

In the neighbourhood itself, support for the protesters from locals revolves more around this bigger picture. While everyone condemns the violence, their statements are quickly followed up with a, "But maybe now they’ll listen to us." Raul Salinero, councillor for the centre left Izquierda Unida coalition, told El Pais that the protests are "the result of desperation. We’ve been trying for months to talk to the mayor about this, with no results."

"This" is the investment by the local conservative government of €8 million into a non-essential beautification project. The work is to be completed by a building company owned by a man locals call "the cacique" (a term for a businessman who runs everything in the area), Antonio Mendez Pozo, who also happens to be the president of the city’s Chamber of Commerce and the owner of the local paper, El Diario de Burgos. With such a lucrative contract randomly falling into Pozo's hands, it's easy to understand why people in the area are so upset.

Annons

Although the sustained and coordinated violence in Burgos is virtually unprecendented in Spain, Gamonal itself is by no means unique. It's a working class neighbourhood in a provincial city, where residents feel ignored and unrepresented by the political class, so want to make their voices heard any way they can. And now, thanks to the protests, it’s not just the local government listening, but the whole country.

On Monday, the government announced that they’d be sending a unit of 100 extra riot police into the city to restore order to the neighbourhood and to prevent "contagion". While, in this case, they’re referring to other parts of the city, something tells me that the government are more concerned about the wider picture – the eruption of similar rioting in any of the countless towns and cities just like Burgos. And so they should be.

Additional reporting by Guillermo Rivas Pacheco

Follow Paul on Twitter: @pauldotsimon

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