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Topic: Sebastian Pinera

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Added August 25, 2011 with 33 photos
Chilean student protests are snowballing into a political storm with President Sebastian Pinera finding himself right at the center of it and not liking it.

The millionaire president, who retains vast business interests but swears by arrangements aimed at avoiding conflicts of interests, faced widening revolt this week after increasing numbers of labor union members and teachers threw their support behind students.

A central union of workers added to general calls for education reforms a longer list of changes, which includes a redrafting of the constitution and statutes to remove what critics see as vestiges of the past military dictatorial regimes, notably the highly controversial rule of Gen. Augusto Pinochet from 1973-90.

The Unitary Central for Workers called for a nationwide strike for the second consecutive day Thursday and invited other unions to join the protest action.

Student protests against high tuition fees began about two months ago and focused on private academic institutions operating with impunity, alleged corruption and favoritism in the education system.

Protest leaders said they hoped to make the rallies "the biggest national strike of the last decade." It is the first 48-hour national strike since the Pinochet dictatorship.

Added December 08, 2010 with 8 photos
SANTIAGO, Chile, Dec. 8 (UPI) -- Fire swept through a prison in the Chilean capital Wednesday, killing at least 83 inmates and leaving 14 others with critical injuries, after a feud among prisoners.

Prison authorities evacuated about 200 inmates from the smoke-filled parts of the building into a jail yard, the Bio Bio radio station reported. A firefighter and two prison guards also received injuries, Chile's online media reported.

Chilean President Sebastian Pinera promptly called the prison conditions unacceptable and promised reforms, adding to the challenges facing his government since he came to power earlier in 2010.

> Pinera earlier had to deal with the devastation caused by a magnitude 8.8 earthquake in February and calls for radical reforms in the country's vast mining sector after the miraculous rescue Oct. 13 of 33 miners trapped underground.

The fire started after feuding inmates from rival prison gangs set fire to mattresses during a fight in Santiago's San Miguel prison. The flames spread through the crowded building, trapping many of the inmates in the fire, La Tercera newspaper reported on its Web site.

Officials said the fire was the deadliest on record in Chile's overcrowded prison system. Calls for reform of the prisons were made earlier by campaigners and opposition critics but previous governments put aside changes, pleading lack of resources.

Officials said the fire likely started in one of the prison's five towers during the early morning fight between prisoners. Television reports showed smoke billowing out of the building and anxious relatives of inmates gathered at the entrance. There were scuffles between prison guards and angry relatives.

Luis Masferrer, the director of the national prison police, told news media the law enforcement officers had been calling for reforms in the system, in particular measures to alleviate crowding. At least 1,960 prisoners were in the building, which was designed for fewer than 1,000 inmates, when the fire broke out.

Rescuers fought the flames for about three hours before the fire could be controlled, officials said.

There were emotional scenes outside the prison as officials began informing relatives of those who died in the fire. However, families accused the prison officials of not doing enough to ensure the names of those killed or injured were announced with clarity.

Health Minister Jaime Manalich said the 14 injured were listed in critical condition because of serious burns.

Pinera said prison reforms would be expedited to prevent a repeat of Wednesday's "hugely painful tragedy" and sympathized with families of the victims.

"We cannot keep living with a prison system which is absolutely inhumane," he added.

"We are going to speed up the process to ensure our country has a humane, dignified prison system that befits a civilized country."

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Greek PM Antonis vists Beijing
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Greek national flags fly over Tiananmen Square during Greece's Prime Minister Antonis Samaras state visit to Beijing on May 16, 2013. Samaras is in China seeking investment and trade deals to help revive his country's recession-battered economy. UPI/Stephen Shaver