Some 500 protesters choked off traffic for several hours earlier in the day to demand justice for two students who were killed Wednesday during clashes with police and armed pro-government militias.
When police broke up the crowd last night, the students regrouped to a nearby plaza, where they burned trash and threw stones at police. Venezuelan President Nicolas Maduro rebuked the students in a televised address and says he won't tolerate any more disruptions on the nation's roadways.
The unrest followed the burial of the two students earlier in the day, as well as a third victim, a pro-government militia member, who were killed in Wednesday's unrest.
At the same time authorities began releasing the dozens of demonstrators who've been arrested in recent days.
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In what's become a family tradition during 15 years of socialist rule, Derrik Redman said he and his son, Robert, attended a peaceful protest of more than 10,000 anti-government demonstrators.
But this time Robert didn't come back, and later in the evening his father received a phone call that he'd been shot and killed in a standoff with police.
On the other side of town, in the 23rd of January slum that's long been a government stronghold and where the late Hugo Chavez is buried, about 100 people, many with their faces covered and waving pistols, paid their final respects to Juan "Juancho" Montoya.