Graffiti painted during protests to mark the 5 year anniversary of the 28 April uprising in Colombia

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Graffiti painted during protests to mark the 5 year anniversary of the 28 April uprising in Colombia

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N14103 1951 North American T-28A Trojan 13570 TL-570 Served with USAF 51-5370 by Chris Murkin Via Flickr: N14103 1951 North American T-28A Trojan 13570 TL-570 Served with USAF 51-5370 Aircraft has also served with the French Air Force and Haitain Air Force Photo taken at EAA Airventure Wittman Regional Airport Oshkosh Wisconsin USA July 2025 HAD_7316
Colombian protests 2021 - paro nacional
Please help spread
(I’ll be reblogging this with updates when I can)
For more than 15 years, Colombia's had a government made up of the same corrupt elite, making the majority of the population's living conditions unequal and precarious.
With the pandemic, the situation has only worsened.
The most recent tax reform was the drop that made the glass spill, as it mostly targets the lower and middle classes, leaving the wealthy practically unaffected.
Not to mention it was proposed with the goal of filling a fiscal gap initially caused by the corruption of this very same government.
However, this is only a small part of the problem, as violence and hunger keep rising while the government shamelessly invests in the military budget.
National private media are monopolized by the most powerful businessmen in the country (who happen to benefit from the whole situation), so misinformation is utterly out of control.
Today, the tax reform was discarded but there's an even worse health reform project (and others) on the way.
Not to mention the rising of police brutality -mostly against women and students.
The task of spreading awareness of what's happening is currently in the hands of civilians and small journalism channels that don't really have that much influence.
So, hope lies in gaining the attention of the international media, ONGs, and other entities.
Coverage/more info:
The reforms, which would have increased taxes on low earners, have now been shelved.
The demonstrations over a proposed tax overhaul tied to the pandemic have morphed into a national outcry over rising poverty, unemployment a
There will be a Colombia national strike or paro nacional tomorrow. Here's what to expect from the protests.
Plan for sales levy on public services and food sees huge demonstrations end in violence, burning of buses and looting
En la noche previa a este 28 de abril, una magistrada emitió una atípica restricción a la jornada de manifestaciones anunciada desde hace va
President Ivan Duque was humiliated on Saturday when Colombia’s mayors rejected his idea to militarize cities to quell anti-government prote
Colombia has deployed more police and army units to Cali, its third-biggest city, in a bid to end disturbances and vandalism amid protests a
please read this! it's urgent!!!
hello all! i haven't been here in very long, but i don't know what to do anymore. there hasn't been a strike this big in many years, and there has been little to no international exposure to my knowledge, so i hope some of you can read this, and try to help!
you may or may not know this already, but the situation in Colombia is pretty bad right now. because of the pandemic, unemployment rose by a stupid amount, and poverty got way worse than it already was: yesterday, about 40% of the entire country's population got reported to be in poverty. that's about 20 MILLION people living in extreme poverty.
added to these (really bad already) conditions, the government has reported there's not enough money to keep the country working for more than two weeks. this is not because there actually isn't any money. there's not enough money for governing because of ongoing, old corruption in the government; and because our president, IN THE MIDDLE OF THE THIRD PEAK IN THE SANITARY CRISIS, decided he should get himself some war planes for literally no reason.
as a way to resolve the fiscal deficit caused by the government, the government decided to draft a tax reform, according to which middle and low class citizens will have to pay a 19% added value tax for anything they buy, especially including basic goods such as meats, grains, fruits and vegetables- pretty much anything you need to eat. aside from that, there will be a 19% added value tax on gasoline (further increasing the prices on food), basic services (water and electricity supply, and internet in middle class households) and even funerary services in the event that you die. if this reform gets passed, WE CAN'T EVEN DIE WITHOUT BEING CHARGED TAXES FOR IT, EVEN IF THE ALREADY EXISTING SHIT CONDITIONS MAKE IT IMPOSSIBLE TO LIVE IF IT PASSES.
naturally, there was generalized outrage when the reform got announced, and so, on april 28th a national strike against the reform began. it's been three days of marches already, and i have never seen everyone come together like this to repel the reform: indigenous people, farmers and truck drivers are blocking national highways all over the country, many of my fellow students have been marching nonstop all the while, bus drivers are blocking highways in Bogotá. this never happens, so it's that bad.
however, this outrage has been met from day one with police repression, and the government has been blatantly ignoring the people's demands. on april 28th, a 13-year-old got shot and killed because he kicked a policeman. on april 29th, a girl lost her eye because a policeman shot her in the face while she was standing in the midst of a peaceful protest.
today, on april 30th, 7 people have been confirmed to have been murdered in a police shooting during one of the marches; there are about 300 people illegally confined in a stadium by the police; one of my best friends has had two tear gas bombs shot into her house for no reason.
the list of disappearances keeps growing, and no one knows what the death toll is; the media keeps covering it all up by bringing attention to the people burning fires on highways and breaking into banks, but there are no official reports on all of what's happening yet.
the president has said he won't lift the reform no matter what, but the strike will continue until it does, and we're terrified. this is the biggest strike in years, but influential government officials are even asking policemen to shoot people even though they're not even meant nor allowed to carry many of the guns they're using, and the national health ministry is threatening to stop vaccine supply to one of the most covid-affected areas of the country.
i haven't even gone out to march, because i live in a high risk household and vaccines haven't been delivered to a significant degree yet and so i'm scared of covid; but i'm still genuinely fearing for my life and my family's. my friend's house got flooded with tear gas because the police felt like throwing a tantrum. who knows what's next?
what's even wilder about all this is that i haven't seen any international exposure, even though it's the exact kind of thing that deserves exposure; besides, at this point i believe the government will only cave through international pressure.
please, i beg of you, if you read this please reblog it, repost it, do whatever; get informed on what's happening, please help us make it trend. the world needs to know, please help spread the word!
MAY 2ND UPDATE:
as of right now, there are no official reports on the past few days' brutality. however, most unofficial human rights organizations claim the death toll is 35, that there have been 45 seriously wounded people, and that there have been 31 disappearances. in response to that, the president threatened to militarize the main cities last night and said it was a way to defend citizens' integrity; what has been evident, though, is that the main threat to the population is police abuse.
this morning, some things happened as well: first, the largest Colombian syndicates (truckers and taxi drivers) announced they'll be going on strike tomorrow and contributing to the blockage of main highways all over the country.
after this was announced, the president announced that he will order the Congress to scrap the reform, and that a different project will be worked on. by previous experiences, this just means that they'll find a way to rephrase the reform so it's a bit more agreeable, but ultimately get us to the same place; aside from that, a reform to the health system will continue regardless of the tax reform's state.
bear in mind the nationwide health system is on the brink of collapse as it is, because even after a year of the pandemic and counting, there hasn't been enough funding to guarantee biosecurity nor treatment: in departments such as Chocó, or the entire Caribbean region, service is precarious at best. further cuts on its budget would be beyond catastrophic.
this obviously means the strikes won't stop, but with militarization seeming imminent (unless the army goes on strike as well, which has been rumored but I find unlikely), and the nonstop rise in police violence, there are no guarantees to human rights nor protest safety.
please help us keep spreading the word!!!
Me siento agotada, cansada de llorar, la angustia me carcome cada fibra de mi ser, la impotencia me gana.
Ya no queremos mas violencia aquí en Colombia.
Chica Lunar (L.C)

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"A painting of what happened yesterday! There is a lot of symbolisms, the resistance of the YOUTH against the hostility of the ESMAD, all framed with the raised and mobilized citizen dignity; in the background The National Capitol covered in a black mortuary and silent cloth. A powerful image that feeds on other small details no less important, skateboards, crutches, umbrellas, flags, a billboard with the word evil, the rain and in the center of the image a Bolívar raising the flag. A thank you to whoever shot his camera at that precise moment. Art is not indifferent and must commit itself to the construction of the Great Historical Pact for art and culture".
BOGOTÁ D.C , COLOMBIA
Seguimos luchando por un cambio. #Arte liderando el #ParoNacional.