The Citizen (Gauteng)

Mississipp­i to replace old flag

DECISION: FOLLOWS HOURS OF IMPASSIONE­D DEBATE

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For many, the Confederat­e battle standard is symbol of America’s racist past.

Lawmakers in Mississipp­i voted on Sunday to remove the Confederat­e battle standard from the state flag, after nationwide protests drew renewed attention to symbols of the United States’ racist past.

The measure passed with a 91-23 majority vote in the House of Representa­tives, triggering cheers in the Senate gallery. A few hours later, the Senate voted 37-14 for the Bill.

“In the name of history, whether you’re black or white, rich or poor, Democrat or Republican, I ask you today to stand in the name of history,” Democratic senator Derrick T Simmons urged his colleagues before the vote.

“I ask each of you as we recognise and understand the Mississipp­i of yesterday, let’s vote today for the Mississipp­i of tomorrow.”

Senators celebrated with cheers, hugs and fist bumps.

Mississipp­i is the only American state to incorporat­e the Confederat­e standard on its official flag, after nearby Georgia dropped it in 2003.

The criss-crossed diagonal stars pattern was used by southern troops, including Mississipp­ians, during the 1861-1865 American Civil War – the bloody conflict that brought an end to slavery – and for many it remains a symbol of the country’s dark racial legacy.

The bill calls for a nine-member commission to design a new flag that does not use the Confederat­e standard and does include the phrase “In God, We Trust”.

State residents would vote on the design in November. If they reject the new design, Mississipp­i will go without a state flag until a new design is approved.

Democratic senator John Horhn said changing the flag was a “big step... in the journey we are on to recognise everybody’s God-given humanity.”

Democratic presidenti­al candidate Joe Biden also hailed the decision. “The arc of the moral universe bent a little more today,” he wrote on Twitter, in reference to a famous quote on justice by civil rights campaigner Martin Luther King.

Votes in both houses of the state’s legislatur­e followed weeks of mounting pressure and hours of impassione­d debate. –

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