The Borneo Post

Security cordon eased in front of White House

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Closed to the public and ringed by metal fencing for nearly a year, the park in front of the White House reopened Monday in the latest sign Washington was returning to normal after the tense Trump years.

Lafayette Square is a typically peaceful patch of green featuring statues of Revolution­ary War heroes. Tourists flock to the park to take photograph­s, and locals would escape their offices to gather on the benches for lunch.

But last June, clashes erupted there between police and people protesting racial injustice after a Minneapoli­s officer killed the unarmed African-Americanma­n George Floyd.

After the unrest led to Donald Trump briefly taking refuge in a White House basement bunker, the then-president was accused of ordering a forced evacuation of the square so that he could walk across the space to a nearby church for a photo op.

US Park Police and National Guard troops deployed tear gas and flash bangs to clear the area of largely peaceful protesters. Authoritie­s then erected a metal barrier around Lafayette Square.

The security perimeter was extended in ensuing months due to presidenti­al election turbulence and the violent insurrecti­on at the US Capitol on Jan 6.

The US Secret Service, tasked with protecting the White House, did not immediatel­y provide an explanatio­n for the reopening of the square.

Much of the fencing remained intact, but paths were reopened to the area, where Washington­ians and tourists on Monday strolled the brick walkways and snapped pictures of the White House. —

 ?? — AFP photo ?? Tourists and Washington­ians visit Lafayette Square near the White House in Washington, DC as the area reopens to the public.
— AFP photo Tourists and Washington­ians visit Lafayette Square near the White House in Washington, DC as the area reopens to the public.

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