The Pak Banker

Minneapoli­s under curfew, state of emergency

- MINNEAPOLI­S -AP

The governor of Minnesota declared a state of peacetime emergency in the city of Minneapoli­s after violent protests erupted on Wednesday night following the death of a Black homicide suspect who police say shot himself.

The city has been the center of protests following the death of George Floyd, a 46-year-old AfricanAme­rican man, who died in May after a police officer knelt on his neck for nearly nine minutes. Floyd's death and further violence against Black people have led to broader anti-racism protests and demonstrat­ions against police brutality in cities across the United States.

Minneapoli­s Mayor Jacob Frey imposed a curfew following what he described as mass looting of businesses, destructio­n of property and unrest. Authoritie­s also said there was misinforma­tion spread in relation to the death of the suspect.

Video posted on social media, which could not be immediatel­y verified by Reuters, showed shots being fired and ransacking of shops. Minneapoli­s police posted a surveillan­ce video of the shooting on Twitter, saying that the victim, a suspect in a homicide, committed suicide and that no weapons were fired by police. The video shows a Black man shooting himself at the entrance of a building as a nearby group of people ran away and police approached the scene.

Minnesota governor Tim Walz declared a state of emergency in Minneapoli­s and said the National Guard would be deployed in the area. "Dangerous, unlawful behavior will not be tolerated. The Minnesota National Guard and State Patrol are headed to Minneapoli­s to help restore order," Walz said in a statement. The police shooting of a Black man, Jacob Blake, in the back in Kenosha, Wisconsin, on Sunday sparked three nights of unrest there that has included a wave of arson, widespread vandalism and a separate shooting that killed two people.

The protests have become a polarizing issue ahead of the Nov. 3 presidenti­al election, which Vice President Mike Pence and other Republican­s described as a choice between "law and order" and lawlessnes­s at their national convention on Wednesday.

"The hard truth is you won't be safe in Joe Biden's America," Pence told the crowd seated on a lawn at historic Fort McHenry in Baltimore in reference to the Democratic challenger to President Donald Trump.

Police in Portland, Oregon, on Wednesday declared a demonstrat­ion near a U.S. immigratio­n agency building as an "unlawful gathering", ordering the crowds to disperse.

Police said they made 11 arrests in the city which has been the scene of weeks of anti-racism protests and unrest. Violent protests also erupted in Oakland, California, resulting in the arrests of several people after multiple fires were set during the demonstrat­ions, according to police.

Oakland police said on Twitter a fire was started at the Alameda Superior Court by people who protested in solidarity with Wisconsin demonstrat­ors on Wednesday.

The National Basketball Associatio­n, protesting against racial injustice, postponed three playoff games scheduled for Wednesday after the Milwaukee Bucks boycotted Game 5 of their playoff series against Orlando Magic.

And tennis player Naomi Osaka pulled out of the semi-finals of a tennis tournament in Ohio on Wednesday in protests against the shooting of Blake. Osaka, who has a Japanese mother and Haitian father and has been a vocal supporter of the "Black Lives Matter" movement, said in a social media post: "Before I am an athlete, I am a Black woman".

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