Stabroek News

New York's Cuomo defends Columbus statues for symbolism to Italian Americans

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NEW YORK, (Reuters) - New York should keep statues honouring Christophe­r Columbus even though the brutalizat­ion of the West Indies inhabitant­s he encountere­d on his voyages to the New World is inexcusabl­e, Governor Andrew Cuomo said on Thursday.

Cuomo said Columbus was an important figure for Italian Americans, symbolizin­g their contributi­on to New York, and for that reason, he opposes removal of the statues.

With protesters attacking statues of Columbus in recent days during anti-racist demonstrat­ions, Cuomo was asked by a reporter whether it was time for monuments in the state celebratin­g the Italian explorer to go. Absolutely not, said Cuomo, an Italian-American. "I understand the feelings about Christophe­r Columbus and some of his acts, which nobody would support," Cuomo said at a briefing. "But the statue has come to represent and signify appreciati­on for the ItalianAme­rican contributi­on to New York."

The anti-racist fervor that has followed a white police officer's May 25 killing of George Floyd in Minneapoli­s has renewed a campaign to remove monuments to the Confederac­y and other symbols of the U.S. South's legacy of slavery. Statues of Columbus have also come under attack in several cities.

Cuomo, the grandson of Italian immigrants and a regular at New York City's Columbus Day parade, has been a consistent supporter of the statues against sporadic calls for their removal.

New York's most well-known statue of Columbus soars above a Manhattan traffic circle that bears his name.

The statues were erected during a long period in which Columbus was hailed in the United States for opening the New World to European settlement.

On Wednesday, protesters pulled down a statue of Columbus in Saint Paul, Minnesota, and vandalized one in Miami, while on Tuesday, a monument to Columbus in Richmond, Virginia, was thrown into a lake.

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