US cities impose curfews as anti-police brutality protests persist

World Monday 01/June/2020 15:19 PM
By: Times News Service
US cities impose curfews as anti-police brutality protests persist

Curfews were extended on Sunday night in dozens of US cities, as clashes between police and protesters demonstrating against police brutality continued unabated.

Los Angeles, Chicago, Miami, Detroit and Washington were all among major US cities put under curfews. The southwestern state of Arizona instituted a state-wide, weeklong curfew after demonstrators there occupied city streets and battled police.

Some 5,000 national guard soldiers have been deployed in 15 US states, as well as in the capital city Washington, in order to provide support to overwhelmed local law enforcement.

During the day, protests were largely peaceful in large metropolitan areas, but pockets of looting activity had led authorities to impose curfews ahead of possible clashes in the evening.

In Minneapolis, tensions were still high. The midwestern city has been the epicenter of the latest protest movement, whee George Floyd died in police custody when a white police officer pressed his knee on his neck for nearly nine minutes. The police officer was charged with murder on Friday.

On Sunday, a tanker truck barrelled into a crowd of thousands of people protesting on a Minneapolis highway, according to video shared on social media and TV footage, in what the Minnesota Department of Public Safety called a "very disturbing" incident. Officials say no one appeared to be have been hit.

Radical groups blamed

A litany of videos cycled through social media showing police officers pushing demonstrators to the ground, shooting rubber bullets at journalists, and, in New York City, a police car forcing its way through protesters after being surrounded, all instances that have led to criticism against police response to the protests.

President Donald Trump was active on Twitter on Sunday, blaming Democratic mayors and governors for the disorder and urging them to "get tough."

Trump accused Antifa, a loose network of left-wing affiliated groups that define themselves by their opposition to fascism, of being responsible for most of the unrest. Federal law enforcement has insisted that far-left groups have pushed for violence.

Experts who track extremist groups, as well as news outlets including Vice News, have pointed to evidence that far-right groups have stoked violence. State officials have also suggested that far-right white nationalists, as well as left-wing extremists, have been involved in the violence.

Later in the day, Trump tweeted that he would designate Antifa a "terrorist organisation," even though the president alone does not have the power to make such a declaration on behalf of the US.

Protests reach the White House

Shortly after Washington began its curfew at 11:00pm local time (04:00 UTC), protesters set fires near the White House.

Police fired a barrage of tear gas in an attempt to disperse the crowd of more than 1,000 people who had gathered at Lafayette Park, across the street from the presidential residence.

Protesters piled up road signs, plastic barriers, tree branches and even an American flag, and ignited a large fire in the middle of H Street, near the White House.

It was the third night that protesters demonstrated on the president's doorstep. A newspaper report on Sunday said that Trump was rushed by Secret Service agents into an underground bunker at the residence on Friday night.

The last time the bunker had been used was during the September 11 attacks in 2001, when then-Vice-President Dick Cheney and Secretary of State Condoleezza Rice were temporarily sheltered there.