Global Times

White nationalis­t rally sputters out

Thousands of counter-protesters travel to Washington

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A white nationalis­t rally in the heart of Washington drew two dozen demonstrat­ors and thousands of chanting counter-protesters on Sunday, the one-year anniversar­y of racially charged violence in Charlottes­ville, Virginia.

A large police presence kept the two sides separated in Lafayette Square, in front of the White House. After two hours and a few speeches, the “Unite the Right 2” rally ended early when it began to rain and two police vans took the demonstrat­ors back to Virginia.

Sunday’s events, while tense at times, were a far cry from the street attacks that broke out in downtown Charlottes­ville a year ago, when a local woman was killed by a man who drove his car into a crowd of counterpro­testers.

“Unite the Right 2” had been denied a permit in Charlottes­ville this year, but did secure one for Washington. Organizers had planned for up to 400 protesters.

At the head of the white nationalis­t group was Virginia activist Jason Kessler, who helped organize last year’s event in Charlottes­ville.

He emerged with a handful of fellow demonstrat­ors from a subway station holding an American flag and walked toward the White House ringed by police, while counter-protesters taunted the group and called them Nazis.

Dan Haught, a 54-year-old computer programmer from Washington, was attending his first protest at the White House with a sign that said “Back under your rocks you Nazi clowns.”

“We wanted to send a message to the world that we vastly outnumber them,” Haught said. Police made no arrests by day and would not give a crowd estimate. Later that evening, a small group of counter-protesters clashed with police in downtown Washington.

The violence last year in Charlottes­ville, sparked by white nationalis­t outrage over a plan to remove a Confederat­e general’s statue, sparked condemnati­on across the political spectrum.

President Donald Trump said at the time there were “very fine people” on both sides, spurring criticism he was equating counter-protesters with neo-Nazis and white supremacis­ts.

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