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4. The destruction of the perimeter wall was largely accomplished by crowds pushing the blocks over. Groups of 20-30 people pushed open seven sections. #SenkataMassacre
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5. Troops continued to fire weapons including live ammunition after they had pushed the crowd back to central Senkata, a 15 minute walk away from the YPFB complex. #SenkataMassacre
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6. The article confirms contemporaneous reports that shooting occurred near the San Francisco de Asis church in Senkata, where Pedro Quisbert reportedly died. #SenkataMassacre
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7. Here is a tweet from reporter Fernando Oz at 6pm: "Two more dead have been brought to the chapel of the July 25 neighborhood in Senkata. There are five here now; the rest were transferred out. Outside, the shots continue." @F_ortegazabala/1196942344974680064
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P.S. Since I know someone will reply "but they were terrorists!" i) this charge largely stems from an exaggeration of the presence and quantity of dynamite in toppling the walls, and likely misinterpreting their motives.
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ii) there's a strong case that protesters intending to attack the gas tanks, rather than confront the security forces firing at them or retrieve the dead and wounded, would have toppled the walls elsewhere in the complex. guidoalejo.wordpress.com/2019/11/24/la-masacre-de-senkata-consideraciones-sobre-la-legitimacion-estatal-de-la-represion/
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iii) once protesters were pushed away from the complex, the urgency (and legality under international norms) of using lethal force to prevent an explosion ended, but military violence clearly did not.
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iv) military spokespeople who claimed troops "did not fire a single shot" are unreliable narrators on the actions and motives of the people who were killed.