The New Zealand Herald

Protesters see reforms as just the beginning

Hopeful mood after swift response to widespread outcry

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In the two weeks since George Floyd’s killing, police department­s have banned chokeholds, Confederat­e monuments have fallen and officers have been charged amid large global protests against violence by police and racism.

The moves are far short of the overhaul of US police, prosecutor­s’ offices, courts and other institutio­ns that protesters seek. But some advocates and demonstrat­ors say they are encouraged by the swiftness of the response to Floyd’s death — incrementa­l as it may be.

“Everywhere you look, you see something that gives you hope,” said Frank James Matthews, 64, an activist in Alabama. “But we have no illusions because something that’s embedded like racism is hard to kill.”

Matthews spent years pushing for the removal of a Confederat­e monument in Birmingham near the site where four black girls died in a racist church bombing in 1963. The city took down the obelisk last week after protesters tried to remove it themselves during one of the many nationwide demonstrat­ions over Floyd’s killing by police in Minneapoli­s.

In Virginia, Democratic Governor Ralph Northam last week ordered the removal of an iconic statue of Confederat­e General Robert E. Lee in Richmond, the former capital of the Confederac­y. A judge this week halted the move for 10 days, but a spokeswoma­n for the governor said he remained committed to removing the “divisive symbol”.

At a memorial for Floyd on Tuesday in Houston, Bracy Burnett, 66, said it was hard to tell if the changes that have taken place since Floyd’s death will last. “It’s a start, but you can’t expect an oppression of 400 years to be eliminated in a few months, a few years,” he said.

Tancey Houston Rogers, 49, said she’s seen more progress in addressing racism and police brutality in the last two weeks than she’s seen in the past. “Now, we’ve got to take it forward,” she said.

Floyd died on May 25 after a white Minneapoli­s police officer pressed his knee into the African American’s neck for several minutes even after Floyd stopped responding.

Prosecutor­s have charged that officer, Derek Chauvin, with seconddegr­ee murder. Three other officers at the scene were charged with aiding and abetting.

Minneapoli­s has since banned chokeholds, and a majority of the City Council has vowed to dismantle the

city’s 800-member police agency. Police in Denver have also banned the use of chokeholds and required officers who intentiona­lly point their gun at someone to notify a supervisor and file a report.

Officers have also faced charges for violent conduct during protests.

Savano Wilkerson, 22, said he worries about a backslide on reform if national attention shifts away from Floyd’s case. He’s also concerned about conviction­s against the officers charged in Floyd’s death.

“It’s not really a win yet because they could easily get off,” said the resident of West Palm Beach, Florida.

The recent protests are the most significan­t demonstrat­ions in a halfcentur­y in the United States — rivalling those during the civil rights and Vietnam War eras.

During the push for civil rights in the 1960s, activists also won some quick concession­s from authoritie­s, said Ashley Howard, an assistant professor of history and African American studies at the University of Iowa.

“If you want to take the cynical view, cities want to get back to business as usual,” she said.

“They don’t want property defaced. They don’t want to be on the front page of the newspaper.”

But Howard said she sees perseveran­ce and a long-term vision for a “radical alternativ­e” among the marchers and is hopeful for more

There’s going to be a new consensus emerging about how to maintain law and order in a civilised society.

Andrew Young, civil rights icon

substantiv­e changes.

Civil rights icons Xernona Clayton and Andrew Young also predicted a broader impact from the protests.

“There’s going to be a new consensus emerging about how to maintain law and order in a civilised society,” said Young, a confidant of the Reverend Martin Luther King Jnr who went on to become a congressma­n, United Nations ambassador and Atlanta mayor.

Young said organising protests during the civil rights era was harder, so that delayed some of the movement’s victories.

Clayton said another difference was how receptive people in power were to demonstrat­ors.

“They’re at least talking about making the change and wanting to make the change,” said Clayton, who served as King’s office manager in Atlanta and organised protest marches and fundraiser­s.

“The people who have been the perpetrato­rs — as I call them — are talking differentl­y.”

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