Seattle protest: Police and anti-racism demonstrators clash at march
- Published
Police in the US city of Seattle clashed with crowds marching in support of anti-racism protests, in one of the most tense of several rallies held across the country on Saturday.
Officers used stun grenades and pepper spray, as protesters set a fire and broke windows. The march was in support of ongoing protests in Portland.
Police say 47 people were arrested while 59 officers were injured.
In Austin, Texas one man was killed during a Black Lives Matter march.
Witnesses told local newspaper the Austin Statesman that a driver turned into a street where protesters were gathered, and started driving into the crowd.
The victim was part of a group that then approached the vehicle. A person inside the car then opened fire on the protesters. The victim was rushed to hospital and pronounced dead shortly afterwards. The suspect was arrested and is co-operating with officers, the Austin Police Department said.
In a statement shortly after the shooting, a police spokesperson did not identify the victim but said he had been seen carrying a rifle.
The victim's mother later identified him as Garrett Foster, and told ABC's Good Morning America that he was pushing his fiancée's wheelchair at the time of the shooting.
"They'd been participating in these protests [against racism] almost every day for the past 50 days," Sheila Foster told the programme. "He was doing it because he felt really strongly about justice and he was very heavily against police brutality, and he wanted to support his fiancée - his fiancée is African-American."
Ms Foster added that it "wouldn't surprise" her if her son had been carrying a gun, as he had a licence to carry and "he would have felt the need to protect himself".
A fundraiser for Mr Foster's burial and ongoing healthcare for his fiancée had raised over $108,000 (£83,000) as of Monday.
What is happening around the US?
As well as Seattle and Austin, protesters held marches in Louisville, Kentucky; Aurora, Colorado; New York; Omaha, Nebraska; Oakland and Los Angeles in California; and Richmond in Virginia.
The demonstrations have been given renewed energy by violent clashes in Portland between protesters and federal agents deployed by President Donald Trump despite opposition from local and state leaders.
In Seattle, thousands of protesters had initially gathered peacefully, carrying signs such as "Feds go home" and "We are living in a police state", and shouting chants of "No justice, no peace".
Later in the night a group set fire to the construction site for a youth detention facility before smashing windows of a courthouse and nearby businesses, police said. Authorities said rocks, bottles, fireworks and mortars were thrown at officers, and one of them was taken to hospital with a leg injury.
Police declared the demonstrations a riot and said they were investigating whether an explosive device was used against a police station. No injuries were reported.
Like Portland, Seattle has seen extended protests against racism and police brutality since the death of George Floyd in police custody in May. But after a police-free protest zone in the city was dismantled earlier this month following a series of shootings, demonstrations had waned.
A car drove through a crowd in Aurora, Colorado but there were no reports of injuries. At the same march, a person was injured after a protester "decided to fire off a weapon", police said. The person is reportedly in a stable condition in hospital.
Demonstrators in the city also remembered Elijah McClain, a 23-year-old black man who died last August after being stopped by police.
In Louisville, Kentucky hundreds of members of a black militia demanded justice for Breonna Taylor, a 26-year-old black woman who was fatally shot when officers entered her flat in March.
Carrying semi-automatic rifles and shotguns, the group walked in formation to a fenced off intersection where they were separated by police from a smaller crowd of armed counter-protesters. There were no reports of incidents.
Earlier, three members of the black militia were taken to a hospital with non-life-threatening injuries after a weapon was accidentally discharged. Police said the incident was being investigated.
In other developments:
Police said at least 75 people had been arrested in Omaha, Nebraska where protesters were remembering James Scurlock, a 22-year-old black man shot dead by a white bar owner in May
In Richmond, Virginia, a city dump lorry was set ablaze, external, police tweeted
In Los Angeles, protesters clashed with officers in front of the federal courthouse
What is happening in Portland?
Mr Trump's decision to send federal law enforcement agents to protect government buildings in Portland, Oregon, has been deeply controversial. Clashes have escalated recently.
Federal officers in unmarked vehicles appeared to forcefully seize protesters from the streets and detain them without justification. They have also fired tear gas and less-lethal munitions into crowds of demonstrators.
President Donald Trump says he is trying to restore order but his approach has drawn widespread criticism and legal challenges.
The Democratic governor of Oregon, Kate Brown, has demanded their withdrawal, and local officials say this is an election-year ploy by the president to try and paint his opponents as weak on law and order.
Mr Trump said he would send federal troops to other cities including Chicago.