The Asian Age

# BLM: A move that defies definition

- Peter Eisler & Alana Wise

Black Lives Matter” has become a mantra for people protesting police violence against African- Americans. It’s a hash tag, a popular tshirt slogan and a movement that is loosely organised by design. Black Lives Matter was founded by three women who popularise­d the slogan during protests over the 2012 killing of Trayvon Martin, an African- American teen who was shot by George Zimmerman, a neighbourh­ood watch volunteer in Sanford, Florida. It has a website ( BlackLives­Mat-ter. com) and a network of chapters.

Although another group organised the march where five Dallas police officers were fatally shot Thursday, news reports described it as a Black Lives Matter event.

“The convenient narrative has been for people, for the media to say, “Well, this was organised by ‘ Black Lives Matter’,” said Tezlyn Figaro, a publicist for Next Generation Action Network, the group that organised the event. The rally “had no affiliatio­n with Black Lives Matter.” The confusion flows in part from the decentrali­sed structure of the Black Lives Matter organisati­on and its founders’ desire that it remain open and inclusive.

“Not everyone who shows up at a demonstrat­ion is a full- fledged member of BLM, ( but) they’re welcomed and encouraged to participat­e,” Melina Abdullah, a representa­tive of the group’s Los Angeles chapter, said in a conversati­on with Reuters in June.

During the standoff with police negotiator­s Thursday, the shooter invoked the slogan, saying he was “upset about Black Lives Matter,” according to Dallas police chief David Brown.

The organisati­on disavowed the violence in a post on its web page.

“This is a tragedy, both for those who have been impacted by yesterday’s attack and for our democracy,” it said.

“There are some who would use these events to stifle a movement for change and quicken the demise of a vibrant discourse on the human rights of black Americans. We should reject all of this. Black activists have raised the call for an end to violence, not an escalation of it.”

That didn’t stop a wave of social media criticism attempting to tie the violence to the movement. But US attorney general Loretta Lynch, speaking about the demonstrat­ions inspired by Black Lives and other groups, drew a bright line between the gunman’s actions and “lawful protest and protected speech”.

“We need to frame out a way to come back to peace,” said Bunch, 35, an African- American Dallas resident and Black Lives Matter contributo­r. “The guy who committed this act, he doesn’t stand for what America is.”

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