Arab Times

Gen. Lee statue can be removed: Virginia top court

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RICHMOND, Sept 2, (AP): The Supreme Court of Virginia ruled Thursday that the state can take down an enormous statue of Confederat­e Gen. Robert E. Lee that became a symbol of racial injustice as it towered over Monument Avenue in the state’s capital for more than a century.

The high court’s ruling came in two lawsuits filed by Virginia residents who attempted to block removal of the 21foot (6-meter) bronze equestrian sculpture, which shows Lee in military attire atop a 40-foot (12-meter) pedestal.

The court found that “restrictiv­e covenants” in the 1887 and 1890 deeds that transferre­d the statue to the state no longer apply.

“Those restrictiv­e covenants are unenforcea­ble as contrary to public policy and for being unreasonab­le because their effect is to compel government speech, by forcing the Commonweal­th to express, in perpetuity, a message with which it now disagrees,” the justices wrote.

Northam announced his decision to remove it in June 2020, 10 days after George Floyd’s death under the knee of a Minneapoli­s police officer sparked protests over police brutality and racism in cities across the country, including Richmond. The nationally recognized statue became the epicenter of a protest movement in Virginia after Floyd’s death and its base is now covered with graffiti.

Separate lawsuits were filed by a group of residents who own property near the statue and a descendant of signatorie­s to the 1890 deed that transferre­d the statue, pedestal and land they sit on to the state.

Descendant William Gregory argued that the state agreed to “faithfully guard” and “affectiona­tely protect” the statue. And five property owners argued that the governor is bound by a 1889 joint resolution of the Virginia General Assembly that accepted the statue and agreed to maintain it as a monument to Lee.

Hearing

During a hearing before the Supreme Court on June 8, attorneys for the plaintiffs argued that the Virginia Constituti­on does not grant the governor the authority to remove the statue. But Attorney General Mark Herring’s office said a small group of private citizens cannot force the state to maintain a monument that no longer reflects its values.

“Today is an historic day in Virginia. Today, we turn the page to a new chapter in our Commonweal­th’s history - one of growth, openness, healing, and hope,” Herring said in a statement Thursday.

Patrick McSweeney and Joseph Blackburn Jr., attorneys for the plaintiffs, could not immediatel­y be reached for comment on whether they plan to appeal the ruling to the US Supreme Court.

A spokeswoma­n for Gov. Ralph Northam said his office would have comment soon.

The Lee statue was the first of five Confederat­e monuments to be erected on Richmond’s Monument Avenue, at a time when the Civil War and Reconstruc­tion were long over, but Jim Crow racial segregatio­n laws were on the rise.

When the statue arrived in 1890 from France, where it was created, thousands of Virginians used wagons to help pull it in pieces for more than a mile to the place where it now stands. White residents celebrated the statue of the Civil War hero and native Virginian, but many Black residents have long seen it as a monument that glorifies slavery.

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