Business Day

No respite in violence as Chicago’s revellers defy the lockdown

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The streets of Chicago may be largely empty as residents hunker down from coronaviru­s but some of the city’s most deprived neighbourh­oods are still echoing to the sound of deadly gunfire and raucous partying.

While significan­t falls in crime have been one of the few positive side effects of lockdowns in much of the US and elsewhere, they have barely made a dent in the homicide rate in Chicago, a city that has long recorded the most murders in the country.

Chicago police say 56 murders were committed in April despite statewide stay-athome orders — only a fraction lower than the 61 for the same month in 2019 — while last weekend, the first of the new month, four people were killed and 46 others wounded.

New York by contrast, a city with a population almost three times that of Chicago, saw 31 homicides in April.

Los Angeles, the secondbigg­est city in the US, saw just 18 murders over a four-week period from late March.

Twenty-one of the weekend’s victims were shot in a seven-hour period from Saturday night to Sunday, including five teenagers wounded in a drive-by shooting at a party on the city’s west Side.

Reports said the shooting came hours after officers enforcing the statewide stay-athome order broke up another party in the same block.

The West Side has some of the city’s most crime-ridden neighbourh­oods and hundreds of people filled the streets there overnight on Saturday into Sunday as revellers partied in defiance of stay-at-home orders.

Mayor Lori Lightfoot had earlier warned any potential partygoers or hosts that they would face arrest.

“We are not playing games,” the mayor said at a Saturday news conference.

“We will shut you down, and if we need to, we will arrest you and take you to jail, period.”

That did not stop crowds gathering on the streets to dance to loud music, with little sign of social distancing or face masks.

Video posted on social media showed partygoers knocking back alcohol and dancing on cars as police looked on. While officers did break up the parties, no charges were brought.

Chicago police told AFP that they would not “speculate whether or not victims/ offenders are abiding by the stay-at-home mandate”.

But Father Michael Pfleger, an activist priest who has worked in Chicago for more than 30 years, said respect for the authoritie­s was limited in the city’s poorer neighbourh­oods, which have an overwhelmi­ng concentrat­ion of African-Americans. “I think one of the reasons is that Chicago is more segregated than New York and LA,” Pfleger said.

“Segregatio­n here is horrible.

You have segregated communitie­s on the South and the West sides that you don’t have in other cities.

“I also think that decades of ignoring these segregated communitie­s hasn’t helped.”

Pfleger argued that someone who was prepared to commit murder was unlikely to be too bothered about observing a stay-at-home order.

Max Kapustin, senior research director at the University of Chicago Crime Lab, said most of the shootings and murders have occurred outdoors and both shooters and victims have ignored stay-athome orders.

“We don’t know if there’s anything else related to Covid19 that may be exacerbati­ng the issue,” he said.

Pfleger believes the pandemic has magnified every social problem that contribute­s to gun violence. But he also fears the US’s biggest problem — racial and economic inequality — will be ignored once the virus recedes.

To combat that, he is urging minority communitie­s and activists to organise now and demand investment in their communitie­s.

“I get so mad when I hear people say ‘I just want to get back to normal.’ No, normal was bad. Normal was evil and unjust. We want to create something new coming out of this.”

SOMEONE WHO IS PREPARED TO COMMIT MURDER IS UNLIKELY TO BE TOO BOTHERED ABOUT OBSERVING A STAY-AT-HOME ORDER

 ?? /AFP ?? Threat of arrest: A police officer wears a face mask while out on the streets in Chicago on May 7.
/AFP Threat of arrest: A police officer wears a face mask while out on the streets in Chicago on May 7.

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