The Free Press Journal

DC TURNS INTO MILITARY ZONE BEFORE INAUGURATI­ON Heavily fortified statehouse­s around US see small protests Starbucks temporaril­y shuts NYC stores over protest fears

- LALIT K JHA /

Ahead of the inaugurati­on of President-elect Joe Biden and Vice President-elect Kamala Harris on Wednesday, the American capital has been virtually turned into a garrison city, amidst multiple reports of threats and more armed violence by pro-Trump supporters to disrupt the so In the aftermath of last week's Capitol riots, Washington D.C. is preparing for the scaled down inaugurati­on of the 46th US President with extreme security measures - closing roads, erecting barbed wire fences and deploying more than 25,000 National Guards along with thousands of local police personnel and those from other security agencies.

The area in and around Capitol Hill, a large part of Pennsylvan­ia Avenue and the White House has been made out of bounds for the general public with eight-feet high iron barricades being erected.

US Marshals are deploying 4,000 officers to Washington DC. Major parts of the majestic National Mall, which during the inaugurati­on is usually thronged by thousands of people, have been closed off.

The entire city is on high-alert as authoritie­s are receiving multiple reports of violent threats from various groups at the level of the incident that happened on January 6 -when hundreds of supporters of outgoing President Donald Trump stormed Capitol Hill, disrupting the constituti­onal process of certificat­ion of electoral college votes.

Despite the heightened security concerns, Biden plans to go ahead with the inaugurati­on ceremony in its traditiona­l location.

In addition to converting downtown Washington D.C. into a fortress, security in and around 50 State Capitols has also been put on high alert to ensure a peaceful transition of power.

"I think this will be an inaugurati­on unlike any other. It was already destined to be, given COVID concerns and some of the limited seating and public access. But having our fellow Americans storm the Capitol in an attempt to overthrow the government certainly warrants heightened security," Mayor of Washington DC, Muriel Bowser, told NBC News.

"Our police department is working with our federal law enforcemen­t partners and the United States Army also has a plan to pivot if we have any attacks in our neighbourh­oods," she said.

"We've never believed that socalled patriots would attempt to overthrow their government and kill police officers. That's exactly what happened. So, I do think we have to take another posture in our city that is more domestic terrorist focused than external to our country and act accordingl­y.

"We don't want to see fences. We definitely don't want to see armed troops on our streets. But we do have to take a different posture," Bowser said.

The Federal Bureau of Investigat­ion (FBI) in its internal bulletins has warned of the potential for violence in Washington DC and at all 50 state Capitols.

"Our posture is aggressive. It's going to stay that way through the inaugurati­on," FBI Director Christophe­r Wray said on the agency's plans for security on Wednesday.

He added that the agency was monitoring "extensive" online chatter about further potential armed protests and issued a warning to the men and woman who wreaked havoc on the Capitol.

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