Colombian police killed at least 10 people during protests that broke out in September last year after a taxi driver was beaten to death while in police custody, a report backed by the United Nations has found.
Subscribe now for unlimited access.
$0/
(min cost $0)
or signup to continue reading
The 182-page report published on Monday says between September 9 and 11 last year, police in Colombia committed a "massacre" against civilians in low-income neighbourhoods.
It says violence spun out of control because officers reacting to protests in front of police stations were unprepared to handle large crowds and were not given orders by their superiors to refrain from using firearms.
According to the report's authors, 75 people were injured by firearms during the three nights of protests in which police officers were also filmed destroying private property, and a total of 14 people were killed by police, protesters who hijacked a bus and civilians using firearms.
Seventeen police stations in Colombia's capital city were set on fire and destroyed by protesters after videos emerged on social media of two policemen detaining a 44-year-old taxi driver who was drinkingat the side of a road, and beating him repeatedly while an onlooker begged them to stop.
Taxi driver Javier Ordonez died that night from his injuries.
"Everyone made mistakes on the 9th and 10th of September, except for the victims of this tragedy," Carlos Negret, a lawyer and human rights expert who led the fact-finding report said.
"Police acted with disproportionate use of force and went after the poorest people in the city."
The report was commissioned last year by Bogota's city government, which held a public ceremony where it asked for forgiveness from the victim's families.
It is based on interviews with more than 90 witnesses, police officers and members of the victims' families and received technical assistance and financial support from the United Nations.
The findings come as police in Colombia face greater scrutiny for their behaviour during protests and different sectors call for the reform of an institution that has long been deployed to fight drug trafficking gangs and guerilla groups in rural areas, and is poorly equipped to handle large crowds of civilians in urban areas.
Earlier this year, dozens of people died in protests over tax hikes and inequality that included roadblocks and small pockets of violent protesters, mixed among mostly peaceful crowds.
According to evidence gathered by Human Rights Watch, police in Colombia could be implicated in 25 of those deaths.
Colombia's police forces are run by the ministry of defence and only take orders from the national government.
Four police officers are facing murder charges for the deaths that occurred in the September 2020 protests, though there are still no convictions and none of the officers charged with murder is in prison.
Australian Associated Press