Townsville Bulletin

Wave of protests as players defy Trump

-

GERMAN Chancellor Angela Merkel won a fourth term yesterday, but now faces the tricky prospect of forming a coalition with two disparate new partners after voters weakened her conservati­ves and a nationalis­t, anti- migrant party surged into parliament.

Ms Merkel’s centre- Left challenger, Martin Schulz, conceded that his Social Democrats had suffered a “crushing defeat” and were expected to record its worst result in post- World War II Germany.

The biggest winner was the four- year- old Alternativ­e for Germany, or AfD, which was critical of the policy to let in refugees. A MASKED gunman opened fire at a Nashville church yesterday, walking silently down the aisle as he shot unsuspecti­ng congregant­s.

At least one person was killed and seven others wounded, authoritie­s said.

An usher confronted the shooter, who apparently shot himself in the struggle before he was arrested, police said.

The FBI said yesterday that it had opened a civil rights investigat­ion into the shooting at the Burnette Chapel Church of Christ.

No motive was immediatel­y determined. A WAVE of protests swept across the National Football League yesterday as US President Donald Trump escalated his feud with players who kneel during the national anthem to draw attention to racial injustice.

Mr Trump ignited a firestorm of criticism after comments on Friday in which he described NFL players who chose to take a knee through renditions of The Star- Spangled Banner as “sons of bitch- es” who should be fired. The US leader doubled down on those remarks on Sunday, urging fans to boycott the NFL as long as the protests continued.

“If NFL fans refuse to go to games until players stop disrespect­ing our Flag & Country, you will see change take place fast. Fire or suspend!” Mr Trump tweeted.

Yet players throughout America’s most popular sport took a defiant stance on Sun- day, kneeling, linking arms or raising clenched fists during the anthem.

About 130 players could be seen kneeling in the 13 games that took place on Sunday, easily the largest demonstrat­ion since ex- San Francisco 49ers quarterbac­k Colin Kaepernick began protesting in 2016.

The first mass demonstrat­ion took place at the NFL’s London game between the Jacksonvil­le Jaguars and Baltimore Ravens at Wembley Stadium, where a large number of players from both teams knelt.

In Nashville, neither the Seattle Seahawks nor the Tennessee Titans took to the field to observe the anthem.

“We will not stand for the injustice that has plagued people of this colour in this country,” Seattle players announced before kick- off. In Foxborough, about members of the Super Bowl champion New England Patriots took a knee during the anthem.

Star quarterbac­k Tom Brady stood but linked arms with his teammates. Reports said the protests were greeted with scattered boos.

On Saturday, Mr Trump also drew a backlash from NBA stars after cancelling a White House invitation to the champion Golden State Warriors and star Stephen Curry.

 ?? SOLIDARITY: Houston Texans players kneel before the game against the New England Patriots on Sunday in a protest against President Donald Trump. Picture: GETTY ??
SOLIDARITY: Houston Texans players kneel before the game against the New England Patriots on Sunday in a protest against President Donald Trump. Picture: GETTY

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Australia