China Daily (Hong Kong)

Thousands protest

- MICHAEL DWYER / AP

A counter-protester (left) confronts a supporter of President Donald Trump at a “Free Speech” rally by right-wing activists on Boston Common on Saturday in Boston. Tens of thousands met organizers with anti-Nazi slogans.

BOSTON — Thousands of demonstrat­ors chanting anti-Nazi slogans in a public rejection of white nationalis­m upstaged a small group in Boston that planned a “free speech rally” a week after a violent clash rocked Virginia and reverberat­ed across the United States.

Counterpro­testers marched through the city on Saturday to historic Boston Common, where conservati­ves had planned to deliver a series of speeches but soon left. Police vans later escorted the conservati­ves out of the area, as boisterous counterpro­testers scuffled with police.

Organizers of the event, the Boston Free Speech Coalition, had publicly distanced themselves from the neo-Nazis, white supremacis­ts and others who fomented violence in Charlottes­ville on Aug 12. A woman was killed at that Unite the Right rally, and many others were injured, when a car plowed into counterdem­onstrators.

Opponents feared that white nationalis­ts might show up in Boston anyway, and turned out in force, some dressed entirely in black with bandannas over their faces. Officials said the rally, the largest of about a half dozen around the country on Saturday, drew about 40,000 people.

Counterpro­testers chanted slogans, and waved signs that said: “Make Nazis Afraid Again,” ‘’Love your neighbor”, “Resist fascism” and “Hate never made US great”.

Chris Hood, a free speech rally attendee from Dorchester, said people were unfairly making it seem like the rally was going to be “a white supremacis­t Klan rally”.

“That was never the intention,” he said. “We’ve only come here to promote free speech on college campuses, free speech on social media for conservati­ve, right-wing speakers. And we have no intention of violence.”

One of the planned speakers of the conservati­ve activist rally said the event “fell apart”.

Congressio­nal candidate Samson Racioppi, who was among several slated to speak, told WCVB-TV that he didn’t realize “how unplanned of an event it was going to be”.

Rockeem Robinson, a youth counselor from Cambridge, said he joined the counterpro­test to “show support for the black community and for all minority communitie­s”.

Members of the Black Lives Matter movement held a protest on the Common, where a Confederat­e flag was burned and protesters pounded on the sides of a police vehicle.

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