Business Day

People around the world show their support for US protesters

• Curfews put in place in dozens of American cities in an attempt to quell another night of violence over the death of George Floyd

- Brendan O’Brien and Carlos Barria Minneapoli­s

Fires burnt near the White House, stores were looted in New York City and southern California, and a tanker truck drove into marchers in Minneapoli­s as the US struggled to contain chaotic protests over race and policing.

And protests spread around the globe, with events in London and Berlin on Sunday and others on Monday, including in New Zealand, Australia and the Netherland­s.

In Louisville, Kentucky, WLKY-TV, a local CBS affiliate, reported that a man was shot and killed by police early on Monday. It was unclear if he was protesting. Police said they had been fired on before the shooting, WLKY reported.

National Guard troops were deployed in 15 states and in Washington, DC, in an attempt to quell a sixth night of violence on Sunday. The unrest began with peaceful protests over the death of a black man, George Floyd, in police custody.

“I hate to see my city like this but at the end we need justice,” said 18-year-old Jahvon Craven as he stood on an overpass watching protesters below on Interstate 35 in downtown Minneapoli­s moments before an 8pm curfew went into effect.

Video footage showed a white Minneapoli­s police officer kneeling on the neck of Floyd for nearly nine minutes before he died on May 25.

His death caused outrage across a nation that is politicall­y and racially divided during a polarising presidenti­al campaign, reigniting protests that have flared repeatedly in recent years over police killings of black Americans.

Authoritie­s imposed curfews on dozens of cities across the US, the most since the aftermath of the assassinat­ion of Martin Luther King Jnr in 1968 — also during an election campaign and in the upheaval of anti-war demonstrat­ions.

President Donald Trump has condemned the killing of Floyd and promised justice but has also described the protesters as thugs. “Get tough Democrat Mayors and Governors,” Trump, a Republican, said on Twitter on Sunday afternoon. “These people are ANARCHISTS. Call in our National Guard NOW.”

In Washington, DC, protesters set fires near the White House on Sunday. The smoke mixed with billowing clouds of teargas as police sought to clear from the area crowds chanting “George Floyd”.

Sporadic violence broke out in Boston after peaceful protests as activists threw bottles at police officers and lit a cruiser on fire. Philadelph­ia announced a 6pm to 6am curfew.

On Sunday afternoon, a tanker truck drove into demonstrat­ors on the I-35 highway in Minneapoli­s, which had been closed to traffic. The driver was pulled from the cab and beaten by protesters before police took him into custody. It did not appear any protesters were hit by the truck.

On the West Coast, there were clashes in Portland, Oregon, where TV footage showed small fires burning as police fired teargas at protesters who set off fireworks.

In Santa Monica, California, upscale stores were looted along the city’s popular Third Street Promenade before police moved in to make arrests. The vandalism followed a largely peaceful march. Further south, in the Los Angeles suburb of Long Beach, young men and women smashed windows of a shopping mall and looted stores before they were dispersed before a 6pm curfew.

The demonstrat­ions brought out a diversity of people.

“It means a lot to see people other than black people joining the demonstrat­ion,” said Candace Collins, a young black woman at a march in Culver City, California.

Thousands of people gathered peacefully on Sunday afternoon for a rally in St Paul, adjacent to Minneapoli­s, as state troopers surrounded the state capitol building. About 170 stores in the city have been looted, its mayor told CNN.

The eruptions of violence have not let up despite the arrest on Friday of former Minneapoli­s police officer Derek Chauvin. He has since been charged with third-degree murder.

In New York City, where store windows were smashed, police arrested about 350 people, and 30 officers suffered minor injuries during clashes. Mayor Bill de Blasio said police conduct was being investigat­ed, with videos showing a police vehicle lurching into a crowd of protesters who were pelting it with debris in Brooklyn.

De Blasio said he had not seen a separate video showing an officer pulling down the mask of a black protester to spray something in his face.

Among those arrested for unlawful assembly on Saturday night was De Blasio’s 25-yearold daughter, Chiara, according to a New York police department source, who said she was issued a “desk appearance ticket” and released.

Protests have also flared in Chicago, Seattle, Salt Lake City, Cleveland and Dallas.

 ?? /Reuters ?? Vocal support: Protesters gather during a Black Lives Matter demonstrat­ion in front of the US embassy in Copenhagen, Denmark, on May 31.
/Reuters Vocal support: Protesters gather during a Black Lives Matter demonstrat­ion in front of the US embassy in Copenhagen, Denmark, on May 31.
 ?? /Reuters ?? London calling: A protest in Trafalgar Square, London, on May 31 against the death in police custody of George Floyd.
/Reuters London calling: A protest in Trafalgar Square, London, on May 31 against the death in police custody of George Floyd.

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