Business Standard

US officials block police ‘extreme tactics’ as protests enter 12th day

- LISA LAMBERT & ALEXANDRA ALPER

Protesters were expected to gather in Washington for a huge demonstrat­ion on Saturday, its police chief said, as U.S. street marches over the killing of a black man in custody enter a 12th day and authoritie­s move to rein in policing tactics.

George Floyd, 46, died on May 25 in Minneapoli­s after a police officer pinned him to the ground with a knee to the neck for nearly nine minutes. The killing has sparked days of protests across the United States against racism and police brutality, and also demonstrat­ions around the world.

Some activists on social media have called for a million people to attend a protest in the capital.

“We have a lot of public, open source informatio­n to suggest that the event on this upcoming Saturday may be one of the largest we’ve ever had in the city,” Washington DC Police Chief Peter Newsham told local media, adding that much of the city centre would be closed to traffic from early in the day.

Newsham did not give a crowd estimate. Local media has predicted tens of thousands of attendees.

North Carolina Governor Roy Cooper has ordered that all flags at state facilities be lowered to half-staff from sunrise to sunset on Saturday in honour of Floyd, who was originally from the state’s Fayettevil­le city.

On Friday, marches and gatherings took place in Atlanta, Los Angeles, Minneapoli­s, Miami, New York and Denver, among other places, while protesters massed again, in the rain, in front of the

White House. The night-time protests were largely peaceful but tension remains high even as authoritie­s in several places take steps to reform police procedures.

A federal judge in Denver ordered city police to stop using tear gas, plastic bullets and other “less-than-lethal” devices such as flash grenades, with his ruling citing examples of protesters and journalist­s being injured by police.

“These are peaceful demonstrat­ors, journalist­s, and medics who have been targeted with extreme tactics meant to suppress riots, not to suppress demonstrat­ions,” U.S. District Judge R. Brooke Jackson wrote in the ruling.

In Minneapoli­s, Democratic city leaders voted to end the use of knee restraints and choke-holds, where pressure is applied to the neck, while California Governor Gavin Newsom said he would end state police training of carotid restraints similar to the technique used on Floyd.

In New York, Governor Andrew Cuomo said his state should lead the way in passing “Say Their Name” reforms, including making police disciplina­ry records publicly available as well as banning chokeholds. “Mr Floyd’s murder was the breaking point,” Cuomo, a Democrat, said. “People are saying enough is enough.”

Protesters around the world are also expected to take to the streets again on Saturday, a day after many marched in a wave of outrage at the death of Floyd and racism against minorities in their own nations.

Black Lives Matter activists have called for cities to defund police department­s. Los Angeles Mayor Eric Garcetti said he would seek some $150 million in cuts to the Los Angeles Police Department

NFL: We were wrong

Black Lives Matter activists have called for cities to defund police department­s. Los Angeles Mayor Eric Garcetti, a Democrat who in April proposed increasing law enforcemen­t funding, this week reversed course and said he would seek some $150 million in cuts to the Los Angeles Police Department.

In another sign of how attitudes have changed, National Football League (NFL) Commission­er Roger Goodell said the league had made mistakes in not listening to players, in a video denouncing racism in the United States.

The NFL has been locked in a debate with players over kneeling protests during the playing of the national anthem.

Two police officers in Buffalo, New York, were suspended without pay on Thursday and placed under investigat­ion after a video showed them shoving a 75year-old man to the ground.

But the decision was met with pushback from the offi

cers’ colleagues, with all 57 members of the police tactical unit quitting in protest at their treatment.

The demonstrat­ions have erupted as the public and businesses struggle to recover from sweeping lockdowns imposed to stop the spread of the novel coronaviru­s. Disease experts have said the protests could spark new outbreaks.

 ?? REUTERS ?? Thousands of demonstrat­ors at the Jackson Square in New Orleans on Friday
REUTERS Thousands of demonstrat­ors at the Jackson Square in New Orleans on Friday

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