Cape Times

Weekend of protests across US

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MASSIVE protests nationwide against police brutality capped a week that began in chaos but ended with largely peaceful expression­s that organisers hope will sustain their movement.

Weekend marches featured few reports of problems in scenes that were more often festive than tense. Authoritie­s were not quick to release crowd-size estimates, but it was clear tens of thousands of people, and perhaps hundreds of thousands, turned out nationally.

Wearing masks and urging fundamenta­l change, protesters gathered in dozens of places from coast-to-coast while mourners in North Carolina waited for hours to glimpse the golden coffin carrying the body of George Floyd, the black man whose death at the hands of Minneapoli­s police has galvanised the expanding movement.

Collective­ly, it was perhaps the largest one-day mobilisati­on since Floyd died on May 25 and came as many cities lifted curfews imposed following initial spasms of arson, assaults and smash-and-grab raids on businesses. Authoritie­s have softened restrictio­ns as the number of arrests plummeted.

Demonstrat­ions also reached four other continents, ending in clashes in London and Marseilles, France.

In Seattle police used flash bang devices and pepper spray to disperse protesters hurling rocks, bottles and what authoritie­s said were “improvised explosives” that had injured officers, just a day after city leaders temporaril­y banned one kind of tear gas.

Around midnight in Portland, a firework was thrown over the fence at the Justice Center, injuring a Multnomah County deputy, Portland police Lieutenant Tina Jones said. Smith said police had declared an unlawful assembly and were making arrests.

The largest US demonstrat­ion appeared to be in Washington, where protesters flooded streets closed to traffic.

Pamela Reynolds said she came seeking greater police accountabi­lity.

“The laws are protecting them,” said the 37-year-old African-American teacher. The changes she wanted include a federal ban on police chokeholds and a requiremen­t that officers wear body cameras.

At the White House, which was fortified with new fencing and extra security measures, chants and cheers were heard in waves.

Elsewhere, the backdrops included some of the nation’s most famous landmarks. Peaceful marchers mingled with motorists as they crossed the Golden Gate Bridge in San Francisco. Cars had been cleared from the Brooklyn Bridge as protesters streamed into Manhattan on a day that New York police relaxed enforcemen­t of a curfew that has led to confrontat­ions. They walked the boulevards of Hollywood

and Nashville, Tennessee, street famous for country music-themed bars and restaurant­s.

Roderick Sweeney, who is black, said the large turnout of white protesters waving signs that said “Black Lives Matter” in San Francisco sent a powerful message.

“We’ve had discussion­s in our family and among friends that nothing is going to change until our white brothers and sisters voice their opinion,” said Sweeney, 49.

A large crowd of Seattle medical workers, many in lab coats and scrubs, marched to City Hall, holding signs reading, “Police violence and racism are a public health emergency” and “Nurses kneel with you, not on you”, a reference to how a white officer pressed his knee on Floyd’s neck for several minutes.

Floyd’s body will go to Houston, where he lived before Minneapoli­s for another memorial.

 ?? | AP ?? THOUSANDS of protesters march near the White House in Washington DC over the alleged killing of George Floyd by Minneapoli­s police officers.
| AP THOUSANDS of protesters march near the White House in Washington DC over the alleged killing of George Floyd by Minneapoli­s police officers.

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