Arab Times

Obama speaks at Dallas ‘memorial’

‘Mend divisions’

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DALLAS, July 12, (RTRS): President Barack Obama visits Dallas on Tuesday to address a memorial for five police officers killed at a protest against police violence, as he seeks to mend divisions inflamed by the deadliest day for US law enforcemen­t in almost 15 years. US Army Reserve veteran Micah Johnson gunned down the officers on Thursday in retributio­n for police killings of bslack people, before being killed by an explosivel­aden robot sent in by police.

Johnson attacked during a march protesting the police shootings last week of two black men in Baton Rouge, Louisiana, and outside St Paul, Minnesota. Theirs were the latest in a string of high-profile killings that have stirred the deepest debate on race and justice in America since the civil rights movement of the 1960s.

Obama has to twin sympathy over the Dallas attack and for rattled law enforcemen­t officers around the country with support for black Americans who say police are too quick to use violence against them. After the deaths of Alton Sterling and Philando Castile at the hands of police last week, Obama said a significan­t number of Americans believe they are treated differentl­y because of the color of their skin.

Obama, the first black US president, has drawn criticism in the past from law enforcemen­t for his tone in the aftermath of shootings by officers.

Hate

Obama told senior law enforcemen­t officials on Monday that he sees the Dallas shooting as a hate crime, or one motivated by bias, said Jim Pasco, executive director of the National Fraternal Order of Police, who was in the closed-door meeting at the White House.

Pasco said Obama drew a parallels between the actions of the Dallas shooter and Dylann Roof, the man prosecutor­s say espoused white supremacis­t beliefs before fatally shooting nine people in an African-American church in Charleston, South Carolina in June 2015.

Johnson, who was black, said that he wanted to “kill white people,” particular­ly police, according to a police account of their unsuccessf­ul negotiatio­ns with him.

Johnson’s death makes the question of charges against him moot, but Pasco said police unions are using the incident to lobby for a change to a federal statute that would allow the targeting of police, regardless of their race, to be charged as a hate crime.

Hate crimes, which carry more severe penalties, are offenses committed with an added element of bias against a person or group for race or ethnicity, religion, gender or gender identity, sexual orientatio­n or disability.

White House officials on Tuesday did not dispute Pasco’s account of the meeting.

Memorial

Obama will deliver his address at the Morton H. Meyerson Symphony Center during a private memorial service scheduled for 12:45 pm CT (1745 GMT). Former president George W. Bush, who lives in Dallas, is also scheduled to speak. Obama will also meet the families of the slain policemen and others who were wounded, the White House said.

Police from nearby Arlington, Texas, will handle security for Obama’s visit, so that the city’s police force can grieve, Dallas Police Chief David Brown told reporters.

“I didn’t want my cops having that responsibi­lity because of the fatigue factor,” Brown said on Monday. “I didn’t want something to go wrong with the president coming here, because we are tired.”

As he has done repeatedly after mass shootings in the last several years, Obama reiterated a call for stricter gun control in the United States following the Dallas attack.

The Senate took up the issue after an attack on a gay nightclub last month in Orlando that killed 49 people and was the worst mass shooting in modern US history. But senators failed to agree on any one approach. While Democrats in the House of Representa­tives, along with some Republican­s, have been clamoring for legislatio­n, deep divisions among Republican­s who control the chamber have prevented any legislatio­n from even reaching the House floor.

On Wednesday, Obama will host a meeting with law enforcemen­t officials, activists and civil rights leaders to discuss ways to repair “the bonds of trust” between communitie­s and police, the White House said on Monday.

 ??  ?? Retired Dallas Police Sgt Paul Schaffer and his wife Melissa hold candles during prayer at the Dallas Strong Candleligh­t Vigil on July 11 in Dallas, Texas. Five police officers were killed and seven others were injured in a shooting ambush during a...
Retired Dallas Police Sgt Paul Schaffer and his wife Melissa hold candles during prayer at the Dallas Strong Candleligh­t Vigil on July 11 in Dallas, Texas. Five police officers were killed and seven others were injured in a shooting ambush during a...
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Johnson

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