Hindustan Times (Amritsar)

JUSTICE FOR GEORGE: THOUSANDS MARCH IN US, AUSTRALIA, CANADA, UK

GLOBAL SOLIDARITY Black Lives Matter protests in Asia, Europe and Australia as secy of state accuses China of using US unrest to justify its own rights violations

- HT Correspond­ents & Agencies letters@hindustant­imes.com

WASHINGTON/SYDNEY/TORONTO : Tens of thousands marched in Australia, Canada, the UK, Japan, Seoul and elsewhere in solidarity with the Black Lives Matter movement as Washington, DC geared up for what’s being anticipate­d as the largest ever protest in the US against racism in the wake of the custodial death of George Floyd.

Over 1,000 people marched in Sydney after winning a last-minute appeal against a Friday ruling declaring their rally unauthoris­ed. In Brisbane, about 30,000 people gathered, forcing police to shut down some major streets.

In the South Korean capital Seoul, protesters gathered for a second straight day to denounce

Floyd’s death. Wearing masks and black shirts, dozens marched through a commercial district amid a police escort, carrying signs such as “Koreans for Black Lives Matter”.

In Tokyo, dozens of people gathered in a peaceful protest. In Paris, police banned a protest planned for Saturday, citing the risk of spreading Covid-19. In Britain, tens of thousands of people ignored official advice to avoid mass gatherings and came together to protest against the killing.

In Canada, Prime Minister Justin Trudeau made an unannounce­d appearance at an antiracial discrimina­tion rally in the capital Ottawa, and then proceeded to take the knee for around nine minutes, along with protesters.

US secretary of state Mike Pompeo accused China of using the unrest in the US to justify denying its own people basic human rights. “As with dictatorsh­ips throughout history, no lie is too obscene, so long as it serves the party’s lust for power,” he said, referring to the Chinese Communist Party. “This laughable propaganda should not fool anyone.”

China has repeatedly criticised the US over the Floyd case.

The US is now witnessing a weekend of protests described as the broadest in its history, spreading even to smaller cities and small towns, including deeply conservati­ve ones. District of Colombia, which had another night of curfew on Friday, has seen a surging number of protesters, undeterred by the heavy presence of law enforcemen­t. They demonstrat­ed in front of the White House, which has been turned into a fortress with tall fences and concrete barricades and walked peacefully to the Lincoln Memorial nearby.

The protests, now into their 12th day, have spread to more locations than the previous high of 650 places during the Women’s Marches of January 2017, just days after President Donald Trump took office, according to a research published in The Washington Post. The study by professors Lara Putnam, Erica Chenoweth and Jeremy Pressman noted t “the breadth of the protests is significan­t” and also because they took place without advance planning and in the middle of a pandemic that has kept many Americans home.

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Protesters painted Black Lives Matter on a street near the White House in Washington, DC.
REUTERS ■ Protesters painted Black Lives Matter on a street near the White House in Washington, DC.
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A demonstrat­or gets emotional during an anti-racism protest in Leicester, UK.
REUTERS ■ A demonstrat­or gets emotional during an anti-racism protest in Leicester, UK.
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Canada's PM Justin Trudeau takes a knee during a rally in Ottawa.
REUTERS ■ Canada's PM Justin Trudeau takes a knee during a rally in Ottawa.

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