Cape Times

Barbs herald Martin Luther King day

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ATLANTA: Hundreds were expected to pack the Reverend Martin Luther King jr’s home church in Atlanta yesterday to mark the federal holiday for the slain civil rights leader, amid political and racial rancour as the first black US president prepares to step down.

The commemorat­ion of the Nobel Peace Prize laureate, who would have turned 88 on Sunday, comes on the heels of Republican President-elect Donald Trump’s inflammato­ry remarks about civil rights champion John Lewis, a Democratic US congressma­n who marched with King in the 1965 voting rights march in Selma, Alabama, and was beaten by police.

Political commentary is a frequent feature of the service at Ebenezer Baptist Church where King preached. He was assassinat­ed in 1968 at age 39.

Trump said in a weekend tweet that Lewis’s congressio­nal district, which sweeps through the heart of Atlanta, “is in horrible shape and falling apart (not to mention crime infested)”.

“All talk, talk, talk – no action or results. Sad!” Trump tweeted after Lewis vowed to boycott Friday’s inaugurati­on of Trump as the 45th president. Lewis said: “I don’t see this president-elect as a legitimate president.”

Trump won the presidency with less support from black and Hispanic voters than any president in the past 40 years, only 8 percent and 28 percent, respective­ly.

US Senator Bernie Sanders of Vermont, a former Democratic presidenti­al candidate and Trump critic, is scheduled to speak. – Reuters

 ?? PICTURE: AP ?? Martin Luther King speaks at the University of California in 1967.
PICTURE: AP Martin Luther King speaks at the University of California in 1967.

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