The Colombian army has begun to tighten its control over the city of Cali following weeks of deadly anti-government protests there.
Streets are reported to be largely deserted after President Iván Duque ordered the military intervention.
At least five people died in Cali on Friday night, the latest casualties in a month of protests which have claimed dozens of lives.
The protests began in April over a proposed tax increase.
The tax plan was withdrawn but the protests grew to cover police violence, poverty and Colombia’s health crisis.
Two weeks of negotiations between the government and protesters have stalled.
Cali, which has become the epicentre of the protest movement, is under curfew until Saturday morning.
The military intervention includes several other areas of the country.
Demonstrators in the capital, Bogotá, said they would return to the streets on Sunday to call for a halt to police violence.
Speaking at a news conference in Cali, Mr Duque said he was sending in the “maximum deployment of military assistance” to the police.
“This deployment will almost triple our capacity in less than 24 hours throughout the state, ensuring assistance as well at critical points, where we have seen acts of vandalism, violence and low-intensity urban terrorism,” he said.
One of those killed on Friday was an off-duty official in the attorney-general’s office. The man opened fire on protesters before he was killed, Attorney General Francisco Barbosa said in a statement.
On Saturday, a security official in Cali said at least five people had died on Friday in the unrest. He said a further five people had been killed in the city, but it was unclear if these deaths were directly related to the protests.