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‘We can’t take much more’: Peaceful protests swell in Washington, D.C., and around the world | CBC News

Byindianadmin

Jun 7, 2020
‘We can’t take much more’: Peaceful protests swell in Washington, D.C., and around the world | CBC News

Tens of thousands of demonstrators amassed in Washington and other U.S. cities on Saturday demanding an end to racism and brutality by law enforcement, as protests sparked by George Floyd’s fatal encounter with Minneapolis police stretched into a 12th day.

The Washington Monument and the White House are visible as protesters gather Saturday in Washington, D.C., to demonstrate over the death of George Floyd, a black man who was in police custody in Minneapolis. Saturday’s demonstrations in Washington were some of the largest the city has seen since the unrest began. (Khalid Naji-Allah/Executive Office of the Mayor via The Associated Press)

Tens of thousands of demonstrators amassed in Washington and other U.S. cities on Saturday demanding an end to racism and brutality by law enforcement, as protests sparked by George Floyd’s fatal encounter with Minneapolis police stretched into a 12th day.

A Lincoln Memorial rally and march to the White House marked the largest outpouring yet of protests nationwide since video footage emerged showing Floyd, an unarmed black man in handcuffs, lying face down and struggling to breathe as a white police officer knelt on his neck.

Demonstrators rallied on Saturday in numerous urban centres — among them New York, Atlanta, Philadelphia, Chicago, Los Angeles, San Francisco, Boston and Miami — as well as in small, rural communities across the country.

“It feels like I get to be a part of history and a part of the group of people who are trying to change the world for everyone,” said Jamilah Muahyman, a Washington resident at a demonstration near the White House.

One of the more surprising Black Lives Matter rallies was a gathering of 150 to 200 people in the east Texas town of Vidor, notorious for its long associations with the Ku Klux Klan.

Floyd’s May 25 death has sparked a storm of protests and civil strife in the midst of the coronavirus pandemic, thrusting the highly charged debate over racial justice back to the forefront of the political agenda five months before the Nov. 3 U.S. presidential election.

WATCH | Anti-racism protest in Washington stays peaceful. CBC’s Katie Simpson reports from D.C.: 

Tens of thousands of protesters marched against anti-black racism and police brutality in Washington on the 12th day of demonstrations after the murder of George Floyd. 1:55

With the notable exception of Seattle, where police used flash-bang grenades in a confrontation with demonstrators in the city’s Capitol Hill district, Saturday’s protests on the whole took on a relaxed tone compared with those of recent days.

The week began with sporadic episodes of arson, looting and vandalism in several cities.

Police have at times resorted to heavy-handed tactics as they sought to enforce curfews in some cities, including New York and Washington, where baton-swinging officers in riot gear dispersed otherwise orderly crowds.

Those clashes have only galvanized the focus of the protests into a broader quest for reform of the criminal justice system and its treatment of ethnic minorities.

“I’m just hoping that we really get some change from what’s going on. People have been kneeling and protesting and begging for a long time, and enough is enough,” said Kartrina Fernandez, 42, a protester near the front of the White House.

“We can’t take much more.”

Demonstrators gather along the recently rename Black Lives Matter Plaza near the White House as the sun sets in Washington, D.C., on Saturday. (Samuel Corum/Getty Images)

The intensity of protests over the past week began to ebb on Wednesday after prosecutors in Minnea

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