Las Vegas Review-Journal

Statue topplinm draws condemnati­on

Razing of Confederat­e symbol likened to Nazis

- By Martha Waggoner and Jonathan Drew The Associated Press

CHAPEL HILL, N.C. — North Carolina university officials and a former governor condemned the toppling of a century-old Confederat­e memorial on the state’s flagship campus by protesters who said its presence on campus was rooted in racism.

The University of North Carolina system’s president and the chairman of the Board of Governors on Tuesday promised a full criminal investigat­ion of the protest that brought down the statue known as “Silent Sam.” The bronze figure of an anonymous rebel soldier was pulled down from its tall stone pedestal Monday night by protesters using ropes and banners to mask their action.

“The safety and security of our students, faculty, and staff is paramount,” President Margaret Spellings and board chairman Harry Smith said in a statement. “And the actions last evening were unacceptab­le, dangerous, and incomprehe­nsible. We are a nation of laws—and mob rule and the intentiona­l destructio­n of public property will not be tolerated.”

Meanwhile, former Gov. Pat Mccrory compared those who helped topple the statue to Nazis. The Charlotte Observer reports that Mccrory asked Tuesday if the protesters are any different from Nazis who tore down statues and burned books in the 1920s and 1930s.

The statue, erected by the United Daughters of the Confederac­y in 1913, had been under constant, costly police surveillan­ce after being vandalized in recent months.

Protesters appeared to outwit officers by raising four tall black banners on bamboo poles, along with more banners on the ground, concealing efforts to tie a rope around the sculpture. They then split into two groups, with most marching away from the statue as a small group remained behind. The banners were up for about an hour before the groups converged and yanked the statue down, according to videos.

Around midnight, workers covered the fallen statue with a tarp, lifted it with a backhoe and put it into the back of a truck for a trip to an undisclose­d storage location.

North Carolina House Speaker Tim Moore said the protesters should be arrested and prosecuted “to make clear that mob rule and acts of violence will not be tolerated in our state.”

His statement and those of the UNC system leaders were stronger than a Monday night comment from Chancellor Carol Folt, who didn’t call for arrests and charges.

Instead, she called the protesters’ actions unlawful and dangerous, while acknowledg­ing that the “monument has been divisive for years, and its presence has been a source of frustratio­n for many people.”

Many students, faculty and alumni argued that “Silent Sam” symbolized racism and asked officials to take it down. In response to assertions that the statue wasn’t a symbol of white power, protesters read from its 1913 dedication speech by tobacco magnate Julian Carr, who praised Confederat­e veterans for terrorizin­g former slaves and making sure “the purest strain of the Anglo Saxon is to be found in the 13 Southern States.”

 ?? Gerry Broome ?? The Associated Press Police stand guard after the Confederat­e statue known as Silent Sam was toppled by protesters on campus Monday at the University of North Carolina in Chapel Hill, N.C.
Gerry Broome The Associated Press Police stand guard after the Confederat­e statue known as Silent Sam was toppled by protesters on campus Monday at the University of North Carolina in Chapel Hill, N.C.

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