Police enforce curfew in Baltimore
Thousands of police in riot gear and National Guard troops patrolled Baltimore to enforce a curfew on Tuesday night, dispersing protesters with pepper spray a day after the city was shaken by the worst rioting in the United States in years.
With helicopters overhead and armoured vehicles on the ground, most people respected a curfew that started at 22:00 on yesterday and continues until 05:00 the next day.
But a few hundred people defied authorities, gathering at an intersection that was the scene of heavy looting in the largely black city a night earlier. Police broke up the group using rubber bullets and projectiles with pepper spray chemical irritant, and arrested seven people. Three more were arrested elsewhere in the city.
Baltimore erupted in violence on Monday hours after the funeral for a black man who died April 19 after he was injured in police custody a week earlier.
The death of 25-year-old Freddie Gray has renewed a national debate on law enforcement and race that was sparked by police killing unarmed black men last year in Ferguson, Missouri; New York City and elsewhere.
Just ahead of the curfew, Mayor Stephanie Rawlings-Blake went to the intersection where protesters had gathered and pleaded with them to go home.
“Let’s take our babies home and abide by the curfew. I want to thank you for understanding that we want to bring peace,” Rawlings-Blake said through a megaphone.
More than 2 000 National Guard troops and 1 000 police from all over Maryland, as well as from New Jersey and the District of Columbia, were sent in to restore order.
Almost a quarter of the 620 000 people in Baltimore live below the poverty line and decayed, crime-ridden areas of the city inspired the gritty television police drama “The Wire.”
Baltimore saw scenes of reconciliation, cleanup and even celebration, as well as continued protest on Tuesday.
Groups of demonstrators marched and chanted “Black Lives Matter,” one of the anthems of a national movement against police use of lethal force, which is used disproportionately against minorities.
In Chicago, about 500 people demonstrated outside police headquarters and marched in solidarity with the people of Baltimore, chanting “Stop Police Violence.” At least one person was arrested, but the event was mostly peaceful.
For nearly a week after Gray died from a spinal injury, protests in Baltimore had been peaceful and Mayor Rawlings-Blake said she acted cautiously on Monday to avoid a heavy-handed response that would incite more violence.
Police in Ferguson, Missouri, were widely criticized last year for an aggressive, militarised response to demonstrations and rioting after a white police officer shot dead an unarmed black teenager.
The security crisis disrupted the city’s daily routines. Schools were closed on Tuesday, but were scheduled to reopen on Wednesday. Gray was arrested on April 12 while running from officers. He was taken to the police station in a van, with no seat restraint and suffered a spinal injury.
Six officers have been suspended, and the U.S. Justice Department is investigating possible civil rights violations.
“There’s no excuse for the kind of violence that we saw yesterday,” said President Barack Obama. “It is counterproductive.”
Obama also said at a news conference the problems in places such as Baltimore were not new and need to be addressed by everyone.
“We can’t just leave this to the police,” Obama said, adding that, “We as a country have to do some soul searching.
This is not new. It’s been going on for decades.”
BALTIMORE NAMPA/REUTERS
Comments
Namibian Sun
No comments have been left on this article