The Borneo Post

Minnesota protesters torch police station

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MINNEAPOLI­S: Flames ripped through a Minnesota police station and seven protesters were shot in Kentucky as unrest spread across the United States over the deaths of black people during police encounters.

Officers abandoned the building in the city of Minneapoli­s late on Thursday before demonstrat­ors barged through barriers, breaking windows and chanting slogans.

A fire broke out, which soon became an inferno that engulfed the structure.

The protests entered their fourth day on Friday and have spread beyond Minnesota, with protests breaking out in several states across the country, including Denver, Colorado and Phoenix.

In Kentucky, seven people were hit by gunfire at a protest on Thursday over the death of Breonna Taylor – a black woman who was shot after police entered her home in March, local media reported.

One of those wounded was in a critical condition, according to the Louisville Metro Police Department. It is not yet clear who fired the shots.

Police responded with a Twitter post asking the city to ‘please choose peace’, alongside a video message from a family member of the woman killed.

She asked those in the streets to “go home and be safe and be ready to keep fighting.”

Thousands joined the protests in Minnesota, which were triggered by the Monday death of 46-year-old George Floyd after being arrested on suspicion of using a counterfei­t banknote.

A video taken by a bystander shows an officer kneeling on his neck as he is pinned to the ground.

At one point Floyd is heard saying he cannot breathe.

As unrest spread, President Trump tweeted: “These THUGS are dishonouri­ng the memory of

George Floyd and I won’t let that happen,” in apparent reference to protesters in Minnesota, adding the state’s governor has the backing of the military.

“Any difficulty and we will assume control but, when the looting starts, the shooting starts.”

Twitter flagged the tweet for violating its rules on glorifying violence a few hours after it appeared.

Minnesota’s governor Tim Walz earlier called up 500 of the state’s National Guard, but after Trump tweeted he defended his decision not to put them on the streets as fire gripped the police station.

“Bricks and mortar are not as important as life,” Minneapoli­s mayor Jacob Frey said at a press conference, adding that officers had been deployed in the city to prevent looting.

He added that the ‘ anger and frustratio­n’ on the streets must be understood, but that the looting was unacceptab­le.

“Our communitie­s cannot and will not tolerate it. These are businesses, these are community institutio­ns that we need,” Frey

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