Global Times

BLM intensifie­s worldwide

Fresh world protests against racism and state violence

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Thousands marched in cities around the world for a second week of rallies Saturday to support the US Black Lives Matter movement, but also to highlight racism and police brutality in their own countries.

There were rallies in cities across Europe, with thousands demonstrat­ing in several French cities, and clashes breaking out in Paris and Lyon.

Police arrested several farright demonstrat­ors in London after violence when they challenged people supporting racial quality there, with Prime Minister Boris Johnson denouncing their “racist thuggery.”

The weeks of historic demonstrat­ions have been ignited by the May 25 killing of African-American George Floyd by a police officer – the latest in a long line of unarmed black men being killed by white law enforcemen­t in the US.

His agonizing death as the officer knelt on his neck was filmed by bystanders and swiftly went viral, triggering fury first in the US and then around the world.

The mass unrest has forced an unpreceden­ted global conversati­on on the legacy of slavery, European colonialis­m and white violence against people of color, as well as the militariza­tion of police in America.

Police stopped protesters in Paris on Saturday from marching through the capital, firing tear gas after some demonstrat­ors pelted them with projectile­s.

In the southeast city of Lyon, police used water cannons and tear gas at the end of a demonstrat­ion attended by about 2,000 people.

The Paris demonstrat­ion was called by a pressure group campaignin­g for justice for Adama Traore, a young black man who died in police custody in 2016.

Traore’s sister Assa Traore called on those attending the rally to “denounce the denial of justice, denounce social, racial, police violence.”

She drew a direct parallel between Floyd’s death in the US city of Minneapoli­s and that of her brother, and renewed her call for a full investigat­ion into his killing.

The rallies came at the end of a week when France’s police watchdog revealed that it had received almost 1,500 complaints against officers in 2019 – half of them for alleged violence.

French Interior Minister Christophe Castaner on Tuesday promised “zero tolerance” of racism in law enforcemen­t, saying it is clear some officers “have failed in their Republican duty.”

His comments prompted several dozen police officers to gather with their patrol cars at Paris’s Arc de Triomphe on Saturday night, throwing down their handcuffs in protest.

Brut Yoann Maras, a representa­tive from police union Alliance, told AFP: “My colleagues felt let down, abandoned by their supervisin­g minister.”

 ?? Photo: AFP ?? A man is lifted up and taken to police lines after being beaten in clashes between protesters supporting the Black Lives Matter movement and opponents in central London on Saturday, in the aftermath of George Floyd’s death in the US.
Photo: AFP A man is lifted up and taken to police lines after being beaten in clashes between protesters supporting the Black Lives Matter movement and opponents in central London on Saturday, in the aftermath of George Floyd’s death in the US.

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