Global Times

Police issue warning as right-wing protesters, opponents square off in Oregon

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Four people were arrested late Saturday as scores of right-wing and anti-fascist demonstrat­ors squared off in Portland, Oregon, where four people were injured in similar rallies on June 30, police said.

Police tried to keep the two sides apart as protesters chanted and hurled insults at each other. Authoritie­s set up a security perimeter around a waterfront park and officers frisked attendees and confiscate­d flag poles and other potential weapons.

The charges against the four people arrested ranged from harassment, resisting arrest, disorderly conduct, unlawful use of a weapon and other charges, police said.

All four will be arraigned in court on Monday. Neither a police spokespers­on nor bail informatio­n was immediatel­y available on the four arrested.

Clashes after similar protests in Portland in June sent four people including a police officer to the hospital.

Among the right-wing marchers, some of whom wore body armor and carried shields, were members of the Patriot Prayer group founded by Joey Gibson, a conservati­ve Republican who is running for the US Senate in November’s midterm elections.

They were opposed by counter-protesters, some dressed in black with face masks, who shouted anti-Nazi slogans.

Gibson told supporters they had to be united.

“It’s not even about those punks over there,” he said of the counter-protesters, in a video of his speech shared on social media. “They’re just an obstacle. We’ve got to get them out of the way so we can truly march the streets with thousands of people, so that we can actually come together with liberals.”

Using a Portland Police Bureau sound truck, an officer told people gathered in and around Tom McCall Waterfront Park that no firearms were allowed, and that officers would use reasonable force to curtail any “assaultive behavior.”

Protesters at one intersecti­on were seen throwing projectile­s including rocks and bottles, the officer said. He called on people there to disperse, adding that failure to do so could result in arrest, citation, or being the subject of “the use of riot control agents or impact weapons.”

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