Qatar Tribune

Troops clamp down in US cities as unrest over racism flares

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• Violent protests erupted across the US on May 29 over the death of African-American George Floyd

• The murder charges laid against the arresting police officer has failed to quell seething public anger

THOUSANDS of National Guard troops patrolled major US cities on Sunday after five consecutiv­e nights of protests over racism and police brutality that boiled over into arson and looting, sending shock waves through the country.

A senior White House official, echoing President Donald Trump, blamed anarchists and far left activists for the violence while local leaders appealed to citizens to give constructi­ve outlet to their rage without destroying their communitie­s.

“There are some people in our streets who are driven there by a passion for our community,” said Melvin Carter, the African American mayor of St Paul, the capital of Minnesota and twin city of Minneapoli­s, the epicenter of the protests.

“And then there’s folks in our streets who are there to burn down our black-owned barbershop­s, to burn down our family-owned businesses, our immigrant-owned restaurant­s,” he said on CNN.

The death Monday of an unarmed black man, George Floyd, at the hands of police in Minneapoli­s ignited this latest wave of outrage in the US over law enforcemen­t’s repeated use of lethal force against African Americans -- this one like others before captured on cellphone video.

From Seattle to New ork, tens of thousands of protesters took to the streets demanding tougher murder charges and more arrests over the death of Floyd, who stopped breathing after Minneapoli­s police officer Derek Chauvin knelt on his neck for nearly nine minutes.

Minnesota Governor Tim Walz mobilized the state’s 13,000 National Guard troops to help restore order while police enforced an overnight curfew after rioters looted shops and set fires in the Minneapoli­s-St. Paul area.

Police fired tear gas and stun grenades to clear streets of curfew-violators Saturday night in Minneapoli­s, and National Guard troops protected the state capitol in St Paul.

A Minneapoli­s police spokesman, John Elder, said a man’s body was found near a burning vehicle early after firefighte­rs were called to the scene.

It was unclear if the death, which was being investigat­ed as a homicide, was connected to the unrest in the city.

Los Angeles, Chicago and Atlanta were among two dozen cities ordering people to stay indoors overnight as more states called in National Guard soldiers to help control the civil unrest not seen in the United States for years.

In Los Angeles, officers fired rubber bullets and swung batons during a testy standoff with demonstrat­ors who set fire to a police car.

Police and protesters clashed in numerous cities including Chicago and New ork, with officers responding to projectile­s with pepper spray while shop windows were smashed in Philadelph­ia.

In Washington, protesters faced off with secret service agents outside the White House for a second straight night as Trump faces the most serious spate of civil unrest of his presidency, in the middle of the coronaviru­s pandemic.

Multiple arrests were reported by US media in Minneapoli­s, Seattle and New ork as rallies continued through the night.

Trump blamed the extreme left for the violence, including widespread looting and arson in Minneapoli­s, saying rioters were dishonorin­g the memory of Floyd.

“We cannot and must not allow a small group of criminals and vandals to wreck our cities and lay waste to our communitie­s,” Trump said.

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 ?? (AFP) ?? Police use tear gas to disperse protesters during a demonstrat­ion in Minneapoli­s, Minnesota.
(AFP) Police use tear gas to disperse protesters during a demonstrat­ion in Minneapoli­s, Minnesota.

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