Bangkok Post

State of emergency declared in Charlotte

Violence grips US city after police shooting

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CHARLOTTE: A second night of racerelate­d clashes in Charlotte, North Carolina, has left one protester on life support, with the renewed violence prompting the governor to declare a state of emergency.

Several hundred people taunted riot police late on Wednesday amid clashes in the city centre, a second night of unrest ignited by the fatal police shooting of a black man.

Gov Pat McCrory said on Twitter that he was activating the National Guard and Highway Patrol officers to assist local law enforcemen­t. “We cannot tolerate violence. We cannot tolerate the destructio­n of property and will not tolerate the attacks towards our police officers that are occurring right now, and I feel very strongly about that,” the governor later told CNN. “That is not the American way.”

The protests were sparked by the death of Keith Lamont Scott, 43, fatally shot in an apartment complex parking lot on Tuesday after an encounter with officers searching for a suspect wanted for arrest.

A protester was critically wounded and on life support, the city said, after erroneousl­y reporting that the person had died. Authoritie­s had said the protester was shot by a civilian, adding that police did not open fire.

A reporter at the scene of the protests outside the Omni Charlotte hotel saw a man who was apparently shot falling to the ground, bleeding heavily.

The evening started out with a peaceful vigil for Scott, but the atmosphere changed dramatical­ly once demonstrat­ors walked to the nearby police headquarte­rs, where one protester pulled the American flag to the bottom of its flagpole. By the time the protesters walked the few blocks to uptown, and encountere­d riot police standing like statues on Trade Street, the marchers were seething.

“It’s too much. It’s too much,” winced one woman, wiping tears from her eyes as she stood before riot police. “We’ve got brothers and sisters and children and fathers who think we’re not going to live to see the next day. Nobody should have to live like that.”

Some demonstrat­ors stood on cars and hurled objects at police, who fired what appeared to be tear gas, sending the protesters scattering.

Scott’s death is the latest in a string of police-involved killings of black men that have fueled outrage across the US.

Ahead of Wednesday’s protest, presidenti­al candidates Donald Trump and Hillary Clinton weighed in on the violence in Charlotte, which came on the heels of another fatal police shooting of a black man, Terence Crutcher, on Friday in Tulsa.

“Keith Lamont Scott. Terence Crutcher. Too many others. This has got to end. -H,” tweeted Democrat Clinton, signing the post herself.

After calling to “make America safe again” in a tweet, Mr Trump suggested later on Wednesday that the Tulsa officer who shot Crutcher had “choked”. “I don’t know what she was thinking,” the Republican said, speaking at an African-American church in Cleveland, Ohio.

The Charlotte shooting took place at 4pm on Tuesday (3am on Wednesday, Thai time) as officers searching for a suspect arrived in the parking lot of an apartment complex.

They spotted a man later identified as Scott, who they said was holding a handgun as he exited and then re-entered a vehicle, Charlotte-Mecklenbur­g police chief Kerr Putney said. Officers approached the man and loudly commanded him to get out and drop the weapon, at which point Scott exited the vehicle armed, according to police.

“He stepped out, posing a threat to the officers, and officer Brentley Vinson subsequent­ly fired his weapon, striking the subject,” the police chief said.

However, mr Putney added that he did not know whether Scott “definitive­ly pointed the weapon specifical­ly toward an officer”. Carrying a firearm is legal under “open carry” gun laws in North Carolina.

Scott’s relatives told local media that he was waiting for his young son at school bus stop when police arrived. He was not carrying a gun but a book when he was shot dead, they said — an account police disputed.

Earlier on Wednesday evening, several hundred angry protesters marched to the Charlotte police headquarte­rs. Some chanted “No Justice! No Peace!”. A young boy held a sign saying “My life matters”.

 ?? AP ?? A protester gets on her knees in Charlotte, North Carolina, on Wednesday.
AP A protester gets on her knees in Charlotte, North Carolina, on Wednesday.

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