The Citizen (Gauteng)

Protests: Trump unleashes army

BACKLASH: ‘USING OUR MILITARY AGAINST OUR PEOPLE’

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Thousands have been demonstrat­ing against killing of black man.

Washington

President Donald Trump vowed to order a military crackdown on once-in-a-generation violent protests gripping the United States, saying he was sending thousands of troops onto the streets of the capital and threatenin­g to deploy soldiers to states unable to regain control.

The dramatic escalation came a week after the death in Minneapoli­s of George Floyd, an unarmed black man who was killed when a white police officer knelt on his neck, leading to the worst civil unrest in decades in New York, Los Angeles and dozens of other American cities.

After being criticised for his silence on the worsening crisis, Trump struck a martial tone in a nationwide address on Monday from the White House garden, as police fired teargas on peaceful protesters outside the fence.

“I am dispatchin­g thousands and thousands of heavily armed soldiers, military personnel and law enforcemen­t officers to stop the rioting, looting, vandalism, assaults and the wanton destructio­n of property,” Trump said.

He slammed the previous night’s unrest in Washington as a “total disgrace” and called on governors to “dominate the streets”.

Denouncing “acts of domestic terror,” he said: “If a city or state refuses to take the actions that are necessary to defend the life and property of their residents, then I will deploy the United States military and quickly solve the problem for them.”

Despite Trump’s rhetoric, Monday’s protests appeared largely peaceful in major cities, though some looting was reported in New York and Los Angeles.

During his address, however, law enforcemen­t officers, including military police, used teargas to clear protesters outside the White House so the president could walk across the street to the two-centuries-old St John’s Church, hit with graffiti and partially damaged by fire during unrest on Sunday.

“We have a great country,” Trump declared as he stood before the church’s boarded-up windows, holding up a Bible.

The backlash was swift. “He’s using the American military against the American people,” tweeted Democratic presidenti­al hopeful Joe Biden.

“He teargassed peaceful protesters and fired rubber bullets. For a photo. For our children, for the very soul of our country, we must defeat him.”

Washington’s Episcopali­an Bishop Mariann Budde said she was “outraged” at the church visit, which she said Trump did not have permission for.

Thousands of people have participat­ed in the nationwide demonstrat­ions against police brutality and racism since Floyd’s killing.

It is the most widespread unrest in the US since 1968, when cities went up in flames over the slaying of civil rights leader Martin Luther King Jnr.

Many of the demonstrat­ions have been peaceful and marked by moments of catharsis such as officers hugging tearful protesters and marching or kneeling alongside them.

Others have seen rage-filled clashes between protesters and police and widespread property damage. One person was shot dead in Louisville, Kentucky.

Floyd’s agonising death was caught on bystander cellphone video that shows policeman Derek Chauvin pinning him down with his knee for nearly nine minutes, as the 46-yearold pleaded for his life with the haunting words: “I can’t breathe!”

“The evidence is consistent with mechanical asphyxia as the cause of death and homicide as the manner of death,” Allecia Wilson, a University of Michigan expert who examined his body at the family’s request, said.

Hennepin County’s medical examiner released its official autopsy calling the death a homicide caused by “neck compressio­n,” although it had also said he was intoxicate­d and pointed to heart disease.

A memorial will take place tomorrow in Minneapoli­s before Floyd’s funeral in Houston, where he grew up, on Tuesday. –

I’m sending thousands and thousands of soldiers

 ?? Picture: AFP ?? TURMOIL. Protestors gather near the makeshift memorial in honour of George Floyd on Monday to mark the one week anniversar­y of his death in Minneapoli­s, Minnesota. Major US cities – convulsed by protests, clashes with police and looting since the death in police custody of Floyd a week ago – braced this week for more unrest. More than 40 cities have imposed curfews after looting and the vandalisin­g of cars.
Picture: AFP TURMOIL. Protestors gather near the makeshift memorial in honour of George Floyd on Monday to mark the one week anniversar­y of his death in Minneapoli­s, Minnesota. Major US cities – convulsed by protests, clashes with police and looting since the death in police custody of Floyd a week ago – braced this week for more unrest. More than 40 cities have imposed curfews after looting and the vandalisin­g of cars.

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