Local January 11, 2011 - 11:41 am

Strike-prone town braces for more

Santiago.- Local organizations of the strike prone town Licey al Medio today began a 48 hour shutdown which snarled business, classes and transport in the zone to demand a probe into the murder of Alfredo Antonio Gomez (Yito), a student and popular leader gunned down by police in another protest nearly three months ago.

Its leaders affirm it’s a peaceful protest, though the main roads to the north central Espaillat province towns Monte la Jagua and Canca la Reyna, were blocked with tree limbs, trash and burning tires.

Meanwhile in the Santiago province communities Licey and Las Palomas a similar situation prompted the deployment of many police agents to quell any potential rioting, as traffic was reduced to a trickle since early today.

More than 50 community organizations support the protest, demanding answers to Gomez’s death.

Victor Bretón, of the leftist organization Falpo, said despite that the alleged crime occurred three months ago, no one has been arrested and the investigation they demand hasn’t begun.

COVID-19

September 29, 2024 - 11:31 am

Warning of health damage from the synthetic drug “pink cocaine”

September 28, 2024 - 9:00 am

Public Health reports a decrease in the incidence of diseases

September 27, 2024 - 9:59 am

Médico Express achieves global leadership in Medical Tourism Certification

September 27, 2024 - 8:46 am

Ministry of Health reports controlled Dengue cases

MOST READ

Economy

Haitian gourde and Dominican peso, two of the ten oldest coins in the world

Economy

Tourism SMEs in DR grow 18% in 2024 amidst digital transformation push

Bavaro & Punta Cana

Punta Cana to host first UNWTO Summit promoting Africa-Americas tourism

Economy

Dominican Republic seeks to strengthen its energy transition with new energy storage requirements

MORE NEWS

Tourism

Collado predicts Dominican Republic’s star role at Africa-Americas Tourism Summit

Health

Warning of health damage from the synthetic drug “pink cocaine”

Local

Trough will cause rains this Sunday afternoon

Economy

Dominican economy grew 5.6% in August