The Telegram (St. John's)

New dimension reached in U.S., in Black Lives Matter protests

- NANDITA BOSE MAKINI BRICE

WASHINGTON — U.S. protests sparked by George Floyd’s fatal encounter last month with Minneapoli­s police crossed a new threshold as weekend rallies demanding racial justice stretched from Washington, D.C., to an east Texas town once a haven for the Ku Klux Klan.

They also inspired anti-racism protests around the globe, as demonstrat­ors from Brisbane and Sydney in Australia to London, Paris and other European cities embraced the Black Lives Matter message.

In Washington, tens of thousands of people chanting “I can’t breathe” and “Hands up, don’t shoot” rallied at the Lincoln Memorial and marched to the White House on Saturday in the biggest protest yet during 12 days of demonstrat­ions across the United States since Floyd died.

A common message of the day was a determinat­ion to transform outrage generated by Floyd’s death into a broader movement seeking far-reaching reforms in the U.S. criminal justice system and its treatment of minorities.

“It feels like I get to be a part of history and a part of people who are trying to change the world for everyone,” said Jamilah Muahyman, a Washington resident protesting near the White House.

The gatherings in Washington and dozens of other U.S. cities and towns — urban and rural alike — were also notable for a generally lower level of tension and discord than what was seen during much of the preceding week.

There were sporadic instances in some cities of protesters trying to block traffic. And police in riot gear used flash-bang grenades in a confrontat­ion with demonstrat­ors in Seattle.

But largely it was the most peaceful day of protests since video footage emerged on May 25 showing Floyd, an unarmed black man in handcuffs, lying face down on a Minneapoli­s street as a white police officer knelt on his neck.

The video sparked an outpouring of rage as protests in Minneapoli­s spread to other cities, punctuated by episodes of arson, looting and vandalism that authoritie­s and activists blamed largely on outside agitators and criminals.

National Guard troops were activated in several states, and police resorted to heavy-handed tactics in some cities as they sought to enforce curfews imposed to quell civil disturbanc­es, which in turn galvanized demonstrat­ors even further.

The intensity of protests over the past week began to ebb on Wednesday after prosecutor­s in Minneapoli­s had arrested all four police officers implicated in Floyd’s death. Derek Chauvin, the white officer seen pinning Floyd’s neck to the ground for nearly nine minutes as Floyd repeatedly groaned “I can’t breathe” was charged with second-degree murder.

On Sunday morning, New York Mayor Bill de Blasio announced he was lifting a citywide curfew a day early.

Still, anger in Minneapoli­s remained intense. The city’s mayor ran a gauntlet of angry, jeering protesters on Saturday after telling them he was opposed to their demands for de-funding the city police department.

PROTESTERS IN A RURAL TEXAS TOWN

Perhaps nowhere was the evolving, multi-racial dimension of the protests more evident than in the small, east Texas town of Vidor, one of hundreds of American communitie­s known decades ago as “sundown towns” because blacks were unwelcome there after dark.

Several dozen white and black protesters carrying “Black Lives Matter” signs demonstrat­ed on Saturday in Vidor, once notorious as a Ku Klux Klan stronghold, highlighti­ng the scope of renewed calls for racial equality echoing across the country five months before the Nov. 3 U.S. presidenti­al election.

Elsewhere in the South, in Floyd’s birthplace of Raeford, North Carolina, hundreds lined up at a church to pay their respects during a public viewing of his body prior to a private memorial service for family members.

Floyd’s funeral is scheduled for Tuesday in Houston, where he lived before relocating to the Minneapoli­s area.

 ?? JOEY ROULETTE • REUTERS ?? Demonstrat­ors lie down during a protest against racial inequality in the aftermath of the death in Minneapoli­s police custody of George Floyd at the Lincoln Memorial in Washington, U.S., June 6.
JOEY ROULETTE • REUTERS Demonstrat­ors lie down during a protest against racial inequality in the aftermath of the death in Minneapoli­s police custody of George Floyd at the Lincoln Memorial in Washington, U.S., June 6.

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