The Asian Age

Racists go home! Protesters jeer at KKK supremacis­ts

Dozens of marchers — some carrying Confederat­e flags, a handful in the distinctiv­e white hood worn by Klan members — paraded shouting “racists go home!” and other chants The two groups were separated by a metal barricade and a phalanx of armed police

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Supporters of the white supremacis­t Ku Klux Klan marched in Charlottes­ville, Virginia, on Saturday to protest the planned removal of a statue of General Robert E. Lee, who oversaw Confederat­e forces in the US Civil War.

The Klan marchers were met by hundreds of jeering counter-protesters in this quiet university town, where the protest by the notorious white power group was authorised by officials in Virginia on free speech grounds.

Dozens of marchers — some carrying Confederat­e flags, a handful in the distinctiv­e white hood worn by Klan members — paraded past hundreds of people shouting “racists go home!” and other chants.

The two groups were separated by a metal barricade and a phalanx of armed police.

Critics say the far right, both here and across the US, has been energised by Donald Trump’s election to the presidency. Be it the Ku Klux Klan, the alt-right or generic white supremacis­ts, these conservati­ves have found a new cause in defending the Confederat­e flag and monuments in the US South that recall the era of slavery. They are outdated, awful symbols of racism for many Americans, who are mobilizing to have them taken down from public places.

Anti-Klan protesters in Charlottes­ville got an early start overnight, throwing red paint on the bronze equestrian statue of the saber-wearing Confederat­e general. City workers were scrubbing the paint off early Saturday. Watching the scene, Mason Pickett, a 60ish retired businessma­n, said he regretted the decision by Charlottes­ville — which he said had become an “ultraliber­al city, even socialisti­c”.

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