More than 200 arrested after anticorruption protests in Philippines

More than 200 arrested after anticorruption protests in Philippines

1 minute, 36 seconds Read

Thousands attended rallies in Manila over a corruption scandal linked to ghost flood control projects that cost taxpayers billions of dollars.

Published On 22 Sep 2025

More than 200 people have been arrested following clashes between police and masked protesters at an anticorruption demonstration in the Philippine capital, Manila.

In a statement on Monday morning, the regional police said while most rallies the day before were peaceful, the gathering in Ayala Bridge and Mendiola “even though unprovoked, turned very violent”.

Recommended Stories

list of 3 items

  • list 1 of 3Clashes, arrests as tens of thousands protest corruption in Philippines
  • list 2 of 3‘More egalitarian’: How Nepal’s Gen Z used gaming app Discord to pick PM
  • list 3 of 3Why Gen Z brought down the government in Nepal

end of list

“Protesters turned mobs assaulted police officers with stones and anything they could get their hands on. Not satisfied with harming police officers in uniform, violent protesters set motorcycles on fire, vandalised and ransacked a business establishment,” the statement read.

It added that police arrested 224 suspects, some of whom were minors.

At least 131 officers were wounded in the clashes, some of whom were “very serious”, but are now receiving medical treatment.

Reporting from Manila, Al Jazeera’s Barnaby Lo explained that while some sense of normalcy returned to the streets of Manila on Monday morning, “there is a heavier police presence than usual”.

“Schools are closed, a curfew for minors has been imposed as investigations into alleged corruption in flood control projects continue, more protests are expected, and at this point they could be unpredictable,” Lo said.

On Sunday, thousands attended rallies in Manila over a corruption scandal linked to ghost flood control projects that cost taxpayers billions of dollars.

While the protest was mainly peaceful, with more than 33,000 rallying in a historic park and a democracy monument in Manila, some took a different route.

Police said they used tear gas to disperse those who sprayed graffiti on walls, toppled steel post

Read More

Similar Posts