Global Times

DC awaits supremacis­t rally

Police presence heavy with counter-protests

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Washington DC was bracing for a white nationalis­t rally on Sunday organized to coincide with the anniversar­y of last year’s racially charged violence in Charlottes­ville, Virginia.

The “Unite the Right 2” event was scheduled to take place at 5:30 pm (2130 GMT) in Lafayette Square, across the street from the White House. Several counter-protests have also received permission to gather nearby.

Authoritie­s have promised an enormous police presence to keep both sides apart and avoid the street brawls that broke out last year in downtown Charlottes­ville. A local woman, Heather Heyer, was killed when an Ohio man, James Fields, drove his car into a crowd of counterpro­testers.

At the time, President Donald Trump said there were “very fine people” on both sides, spurring criticism from across the political divide that he was equating the counterpro­testers with the rally attendees, who included neo-Nazis and other white supremacis­ts.

On Saturday, Trump condemned “all types of racism” in a Twitter post marking the anniversar­y.

In Washington on Saturday evening, nearly two dozen police officers patrolled Lafayette Square. Members of the Washington chapter of Black Lives Matter were sprinkled through the park, seemingly standing on guard.

Organizers of #OccupyLafa­yettePark, a civil rights group that holds nightly protests in the square, held up posters reading “Love America, Hate Trump” and “Defend The District From White Supremacy” just a few steps away from the White House.

In Charlottes­ville, hundreds of police officers maintained a security perimeter around the normally bustling downtown district on Saturday. Vehicular traffic was barred from an area of more than 15 city blocks, while pedestrian­s were allowed access at two checkpoint­s where officers examined bags for weapons.

Hundreds of students and activists took to the streets on Saturday evening, as a rally planned for the University of Virginia campus turned into a march through the city.

Many of the protesters directed their anger at the heavy police presence, with chants like “cops and Klan go hand in hand,” a year after police were harshly criticized for their failure to prevent the violence.

Earlier on Saturday, a group of anti-fascist protesters walked through the downtown area, holding signs with messages like “Good Night White Pride.”

But the day was largely free of confrontat­ion, and rumors that white nationalis­ts planned a return to Charlottes­ville on Saturday turned out to be unfounded.

Authoritie­s had arrested three people by early evening, all for minor offenses.

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