Justice For Inner Planets Lives Matter

Justice For Inner Planets Lives Matter THONG, KENT THONG KONG

11/06/2020
English: Thursday 4 June 2020French:     Jeudi    4  Juin  2020'No arrests or disorder' as thousands gather to protestTh...
11/06/2020

English: Thursday 4 June 2020
French: Jeudi 4 Juin 2020

'No arrests or disorder' as thousands gather to protest

There were no arrests or disorder at a protest in Birmingham city centre on Thursday, police say.

West Midlands Police said an estimated 4,000 people took part in the demonstration in Centenary Square held in the wake of George Floyd's death in police custody.

"The protesters were loud and passionate, and made their voices clearly heard, but there were no arrests and no disorder," a force spokesman said.

The gathering was "much larger than is allowed" by regulations, it said, adding "we will only enforce the regulations when absolutely necessary."

"We put in place a proportionate policing plan for this protest, which involved a small number of officers in place to engage with the protesters."

English: Thursday 4 June 2020French:     Jeudi    4  Juin  2020George Floyd death: Thousands join Birmingham protestThe ...
11/06/2020

English: Thursday 4 June 2020
French: Jeudi 4 Juin 2020

George Floyd death: Thousands join Birmingham protest

The protest was held in Birmingham's Centenary Square
Thousands of demonstrators gathered in Birmingham to protest about the death of George Floyd in US police custody.

Mr Floyd, an African-American, died on 25 May when a white police officer continued to kneel on his neck after he pleaded he could not breathe.

Thousands of people marched in London on Wednesday after the death sparked global protests against racism.

The Birmingham protest started outside the library but later moved through the city to the police's headquarters.

West Midlands Police said an estimated 4,000 people took part and there were no arrests.

"The protesters were loud and passionate, and made their voices clearly heard, but there were no arrests and no disorder," a force spokesman said.

The city "has a proud history of standing up to racism", the council said
Protest organisers UK Isn't Innocent said Britain had "a duty to stand in solidarity with the US while exposing the inner workings of racism and police brutality in the UK".

"We are tired and we have been tired for too long," lead organiser Hannah Ringane said.

"We have been taught that we won't be treated the same as everyone else, that we will be viewed as aggressors."

George Floyd's death has led to protests around the world

The demonstration had to be relocated to a larger square due to the number of protesters

Carol Smith, who was among the demonstrators, said: "My grandchildren were born here, they have to have a different world to the world I have.

"They have to realise they have a right to be here, and they have a right to equality, just like everyone else who don't look like them.

"I can't give you the answer to racism. I didn't create it, people who look like me didn't create it."

Derrick Bassaragh added: "Young kids - black, white and Asian - demand parity, justice, love and equality.

"Not just for us, but changes for the world. These are the things that are demanded now."

Protesters in Birmingham shouted "I can't breathe"

Crowds took a knee as the protest moved through the city

Aston Villa and England defender Tyrone Mings - who was targeted with racist abuse while playing for his country against Bulgaria last year - indicated he would join demonstrators, urging his followers online to "stand for what's right".

Latest news and updates from the West Midlands
People were originally due to gather in Victoria Square outside the council house, but when it became clear the numbers would be too large it was moved to Centenary Square.

Although it was billed as a stand-in demonstration, protesters moved on from the square and marched towards Lloyd House, the headquarters for West Midlands Police, shouting "justice now" and calling for an end to police brutality.

The demonstration continued into the evening

Demonstrators marched on Lloyd House, the headquarters for West Midlands Police
In the past month, the Independent Office for Police Conduct has begun nine investigations into West Midlands Police connected to alleged excessive use of force on black men and two officers have been suspended.

Ch Insp Sarah Tambling, from the force, said she was "really pleased with the atmosphere" at the protest in the city.

At the scene
By Phil Mackie, BBC News correspondent

Although some people have begun to leave, many more are continuing to arrive. The atmosphere has been good, with whole families coming to express their solidarity with the demonstrators.

A handful of police liaison officers have kept a respectful distance and the crowds have remained peaceful.

The younger generation in particular have made banners with clever slogans, while several older onlookers, especially from the Afro-Caribbean community, have been overcome with emotion when they see the size of the crowd.

The demonstration began in Centenary Square

The protest moved down Colmore Row after stopping outside West Midlands Police's headquarters

Birmingham City Council said it supported the demonstration, but encouraged protesters to maintain social distancing.

"The city of Birmingham has a long and proud history of standing up to racism and to prejudice, and that is why today we stand in solidarity with the Black Lives Matter movement," said Labour councillor and cabinet member for social inclusion John Cotton.

Four Minneapolis police officers have been charged over 46-year-old Mr Floyd 's death, including Derek Chauvin who faces a second-degree murder charge.

English: Thursday 4 June 2020French:     Jeudi    4  Juin  2020George Floyd death: PM urged to tell Trump to 'respect hu...
11/06/2020

English: Thursday 4 June 2020
French: Jeudi 4 Juin 2020

George Floyd death: PM urged to tell Trump to 'respect human rights'

Boris Johnson must urge Donald Trump to "respect human rights" following protests over the death of George Floyd, the Labour leader has said.

In a letter to the prime minister, Sir Keir Starmer says the events "shone a spotlight on the racism" experienced by black and minority ethnic communities.

He also sought reassurance that UK exports were not being used in "the suppression of democratic rights".

Mr Johnson has said he was "appalled" by what happened to Mr Floyd.

Speaking at a press conference on Wednesday the prime minister said: "My message to President Trump, to everybody in the United States from the UK is that... racism, racist violence has no place in our society."

A video showing Mr Floyd, 46, being arrested on 25 May in Minneapolis and a white police officer continuing to kneel on his neck even after he pleaded that he could not breathe has triggered protests across the US and the world, including in the UK.

On Wednesday, thousands marched in London in a demonstration organised by the Black Lives Matter group.

Thousands join UK protests over George Floyd death
Why the US protests resonate in the UK
The last 30 minutes of George Floyd's life
Writing to Mr Johnson, Sir Keir said he was angered by Mr Floyd's death and "the response of US authorities to peaceful protest",

He said the UK has "a moral obligation to speak out" in defence of human rights and the "fundamental democratic right to protest".

He also asked the PM if his government had raised concerns with the US about the treatment of peaceful protesters; how the government would ensure UK exports are not being used "in the suppression of democratic rights" and what steps the government were taking to reassure black communities in the UK.

Sir Keir Starmer raised Mr Floyd's death at Prime Minister's Questions
He said the death of George Floyd had "justifiably prompted anger and a burning desire for fundamental change".

"The UK must be clear in showing that we understand this frustration and that we are ready to stand together with those who seek to tackle the injustice and inequality that remains within all our societies."

'Lack of moral leadership'
During a radio interview First Minister of Scotland Nicola Sturgeon, when asked if President Trump was a racist, said: "I think sometimes it's hard to not conclude that, and what I always say when I'm asked questions that that is I can't see inside his head.

"But I do know that the language you use and how you express yourself matters and if you don't want to be accused of racism then don't use racist language, don't sound as if you are equating people who protest against racism with people who take to the streets in order to try to perpetrate racist values and attitudes."

She also suggested the US president was "displaying a lack of leadership, perhaps, a lack of moral leadership".

Meanwhile, Labour MP Dawn Butler has organised a cross party letter urging the government to halt the sale of tear gas, rubber bullets, and riot shields to the US.

Asked about the subject in the House of Commons, equalities minister Kemi Badenoch said: "Like all right-minded people, regardless of their race, I was profoundly disturbed by the brutal murder of George Floyd at the hands of the police.

"During these moments of heightened racial tension, we must not pander to anyone who seeks to inflame those tensions.

"Instead we must work together to improve the lives of people from BME communities."

English: Thursday 4 June 2020French:     Jeudi    4  Juin  2020George Floyd's death was "so similar" to Sheku'sThe siste...
11/06/2020

English: Thursday 4 June 2020
French: Jeudi 4 Juin 2020

George Floyd's death was "so similar" to Sheku's
The sister of a man who died in police custody in Fife says the video of George Floyd's death in the US brought back memories of her brother.

Sheku Bayoh never regained consciousness after he was restrained by police in Kirkcaldy in May 2015.

Protests over the death of Mr Floyd, who was being restrained by police, have resonated with the family.

Like George Floyd's family, Kadi Johnson believes her brother would not have died as he did if he was white.

She told BBC Scotland she could not even watch the video of Mr Floyd being restrained by police in Minneapolis.

The officers who restrained Mr Bayoh have always denied any wrongdoing.

A video showing George Floyd being restrained by four police officers sparked outrage across the globe

A BBC investigation revealed footage of the Sheku Bayoh incident

Ms Johnson said: "I could just see my brother, the way he was handled by the police. And it just brought me so much anger and pain, I relived the whole situation again. I was angry and hurt."

She could see similarities: "George Floyd cried 'I can't breathe', the same thing happened to Sheku. He cried 'I can't breathe, get off me'. Why should our black brothers die in the hands of our police who are supposed to protect us?"

George Floyd: What happened in the final moments of his life
Asked if she felt Mr Bayoh would have been treated differently if he was white, his sister said: "Definitely. If he was a white man that is not the way his life would have ended. There is no doubt about it.

"We have seen other police officers handling white people who have committed severe crimes - they are not dead. Some of them are not even in jail, they are in hospital. But my brother had to die."

Sheku Bayoh died in police custody in Fife in 2015
Sheku Bayoh police officers will be allowed to retire
Sheku Bayoh: Fresh questions over death in police custody
Sheku Bayoh's family 'devastated' over no charges
Mr Bayoh was 32 years old when he died. He was found to have suffered 23 separate injuries.

The officers involved have always denied any wrongdoing. No prosecutions were made and Mr Bayoh's death will now be the subject of a public inquiry.

Ms Johnson said: "If he was behaving erratically the police are trained to de-escalate situations like that why did they not use that to save my brother?

"If my brother broke the law he should have been dealt with accordingly. If excessive force was used then that is not acceptable."

George Floyd was heard crying "I can't breathe" before he died
Back in 2015, police in Kirkcaldy had responded to calls about a man behaving erratically with a knife. By the time they got there Sheku Bayoh was not carrying a weapon. He had taken the drugs M**A and Flakk.

Police used CS spray and leg restraints and batons to subdue him. He died shortly afterwards in hospital.

Ms Johnson said he had everything to live for: "He shouldn't have died the way he died.

"He had so many plans. He lived for his boys and wanted to see them grow up.

"But all that was taken away from him. His mother cries every day."

George Floyd's story has caused a global outcry, and Sheku Bayoh's family wish his death had too.

His friends wanted to take to the streets the day it happened but, as Ms Johnson said, they trusted in the authorities.

She said: "We had to keep our cool. We trusted in the authorities because they promised they would do the right thing."

But scenes of protesters taking to the streets stirred the younger members of her family.

Thousands of people turned out to protest against racism in London, Manchester and Cardiff
She said: "We are black people but we are not bad people. We contribute a lot to society so why do our children have to feel afraid walking in the streets.

"My children and nieces and nephews are angry. When they saw George Floyd's video they were angry and hurt, remembering their uncle and how he died.

"Enough is enough."

Ms Johnson joined with the family lawyer Aamer Anwar, Justice Secretary Humza Yousaf and Labour MSP Anas Sarwar to issue a joint statement urging those demanding justice for George Floyd to protest digitally due to the coronavirus pandemic.

The joint statement highlighted UK Government statistics showing BAME lives have been disproportionately impacted by Covid-19.

It said that due to the "fragility" of Scotland's situation easing out of lockdown, that people should avoid gathering in protest.

'Anger and sadness'
A nurse, Ms Johnson also said she would not be attending Black Lives Matter protests planned for Sunday as the danger of the spread of coronavirus was still too great.

Humza Yousaf said: "I fully understand and feel the anger, and the sadness, that leads people to want to gather together and to show solidarity and community at this time.

"Unfortunately, the threat of Covid-19 is still with us and I must urge people not to attend mass gatherings, which pose a clear risk to public health, even with social distancing in place."

11/06/2020

English: Thursday 4 June 2020
French: Jeudi 4 Juin 2020

George Floyd death: Hundreds join Leamington Spa protest

Hundreds have gathered in Leamington Spa to protest over the death of George Floyd, who died in US police custody.

It began with a march down the main street of the town, followed by a rally at the Pump Room Gardens.

Protesters kneeled and chanted his name.

Among those speaking at the rally was Junior Cunningham, from Warwick, who said he attended for his mixed-race son and daughter.

11/06/2020

English: Thursday 4 June 2020
French: Jeudi 4 Juin 2020

Birmingham chants for George Floyd

Several thousand people have protested in Birmingham over George Floyd's death in police custody.

The African-American died after a white officer knelt on his neck for nearly nine minutes in Minneapolis, Minnesota, last week.

His loss has sparked mass protests across the United States and also in the UK.

The Birmingham demonstration was organised by anti-racism group, Black Lives Matter.

English: Thursday 4 June 2020French:     Jeudi   4  Juin 2020George Floyd death: Northampton council sends "solidarity" ...
11/06/2020

English: Thursday 4 June 2020
French: Jeudi 4 Juin 2020

George Floyd death: Northampton council sends "solidarity" message

Protesters angry at the death of George Floyd in Minneapolis gathered in Abington Street
Councillors from different parties have issued a message of "solidarity" after a Black Lives Matters town centre protest.

Hundreds of people gathered in Abington Street, Northampton on Wednesday following the death of African-American George Floyd on 25 May.

Protesters chanted "I can't breathe" and "Black Lives Matter".

Northampton Borough Council said: "We acknowledge and understand the anger currently felt by so many."

Protests began in the US after a video showed Mr Floyd, 46, being arrested in Minneapolis and a white police officer continuing to kneel on his neck even after he pleaded he could not breathe.

Thousands of people joined a protest in London on Wednesday.

On Thursday, Northamptonshire Police tweeted to thank those who took part in the Northamprotest, which the force called "a peaceful and well-organised event".

It said: "Like many people across the world, we are appalled at the way in which George Floyd died."

The force also tweeted a warning about social distancing during the coronavirus crisis, acknowledging that while people "will want to continue making their voices on this issue heard", they should "be mindful of social distancing as Covid-19 is still very much a danger".

The borough council statement was signed by leader of the authority, Conservative Jonathan Nunn, Labour's Danielle Stone and Liberal Democrat Sally Beardsworth.

It said all councillors were "incredibly proud of Northampton's diverse and integrated community".

"We acknowledge and understand the anger currently felt by so many, especially those from our Black, Asian and Minority Ethnic communities, and we stand in solidarity with you in the absolute belief that every individual and all communities should feel cared for, respected, equal, and fairly treated," it said.

English: Wednesday 3 June 2020French: Mercredi 3 juin 2020Viewpoint: US must confront its Original Sin to move forwardFo...
10/06/2020

English: Wednesday 3 June 2020
French: Mercredi 3 juin 2020

Viewpoint: US must confront its Original Sin to move forward

Following the death of George Floyd while under arrest, protests have consumed America and onlookers have wondered how one of the most powerful countries in the world could descend into such chaos.

Despite being defined by race, American society does not spend much time analysing the history of our racial divisions, and America prefers to believe in the inevitable progression towards racial equality.

The election of Barack Obama in 2008 fed into this narrative of progress, but Donald Trump's presidential victory in 2016 was seen as a step backwards, coming after a campaign with a slogan that championed America's divisive past as a form of progress.

Floyd's death now appears to be the tipping point for an exhausted, racially divided nation still in the throes of the coronavirus pandemic and the economic cost that followed.

'I lost my best friend in a police shooting'
Timeline of US police killings
Three facts that help explain anger in the US
Floyd's cries of "I can't breathe" echoed the cries of Eric Garner, who was choked by police on a New York City sidewalk in 2014.

Floyd's words reminded Americans of the oppressive past we work to forget regardless of whether it is six years ago, 60 years ago, the 1860s, or 1619 when some of the first slaves arrived in America.

To a large extent, America's neglect of the past and belief in progress have left many Americans unaware of the severity and scope of our racial tensions, and as a result many Americans lack the words to articulate our current turmoil. Recently, I have used the word ethnocide meaning "the destruction of culture while keeping the people" to describe America's past and present racial tensions, and this language also helps articulate the uniqueness of America's race problem.

In 1941, Raphael Lemkin, a Polish Jew and distinguished lawyer, immigrated to the United States as he fled the N***s. While in America he implored the American government to stop the N***s from killing his people, and as his words fell on deaf ears, he realized he needed to create a new word to describe the unique horror befalling his people. In 1944, Lemkin coined the words genocide and ethnocide.

Lemkin intended for the words to be interchangeable but over time they diverged. Genocide became the destruction of a people and their culture, and this word radically changed the world for the better. Ethnocide became the destruction of culture while keeping the people, and has been ignored for decades. Recently, ethnocide has been used to describe the plight of indigenous people against colonisation, but regarding America, ethnocide also pertains to the transatlantic slave trade and the founding of the nation.

From the beginning of the transatlantic slave trade, European colonisers destroyed the culture of African people, but kept their bodies in order to create the chattel slavery system that became the economic and social foundation of the United States. Colonisers prevented Africans from speaking their languages and practising their religions. Tribal and familial bonds were broken, and African people could no longer identify as Igbo, Yoruba, and Malian. Instead de-cultured names such as ni**er, negro, coloured, and black were stamped upon African people.

Additionally, Europeans identified themselves as white, and in the United States the one-drop rule was created to sustain that division. One drop of black or African blood meant that a person could not be white. In America, whiteness became a zero-sum identity that was maintained by systemic racial division. In*******al marriage was still illegal in much of America until the Loving vs Virginia decision in 1967.

Read more from Barrett
Behind the legacy of America's blackface
Viewpoint: A 'true horror' story for black Americans
Viewpoint: Why racial incidents are part of America
Beyonce’s Homecoming salutes black culture
From colonisation to the formation of the United States, America has created countless laws and policies to sustain the racial division between blacks and whites forged by ethnocide. These American norms, extending to housing, education, employment, healthcare, law enforcement and environmental protections including clean drinking water, have disproportionately harmed African Americans and other communities of colour in order to sustain racial division and white dominance.

George Floyd's murder represents a continuation of the systemic criminalisation and oppression of black life in America that has always been the American norm dating back to Jim Crow, segregation (which means apartheid), and slavery.

When the Confederacy, the collection of American slave-holding states in the South, seceded from the United States, they launched the Civil War to defend the immoral institution of slavery. After losing the Civil War, these states were readmitted back into the United States. To this day, many Americans, and especially America hate groups, still celebrate Confederate soldiers and politicians as heroes, and there are monuments and memorials dedicated to them across America.

Despite the American South losing the Civil War in 1865, American President Andrew Johnson pardoned Confederate soldiers, and soon thereafter Confederate politicians won elected office in the newly-reunited America. The influence of former slave owners and Confederates contributed to erasing the rights that African Americans won in the 1860s including citizenship and the right to vote.

The political campaign to remove African American rights was called the Redeemers movement, and it was led by former slave-owners and Confederates, who wanted to redeem the South by returning it to the norms of chattel slavery. The Redeemers and "Make America Great Again" derive from America's oppressive, ethnocidal school of thought.

The Redeemers were also assisted by American terrorist groups such as the Ku Klux Klan (K*K) that were made up of former Confederate soldiers. The K*K, and many other white supremacist groups, terrorised and lynched black Americans, and they also prevented them from voting to help ensure that Redeemer candidates won elected office. The terrorists became the government.

Protesters attacked by police dogs during demonstrations against segregation in Alabama in 1963
By the start of the 20th Century, the Redeemers had succeeded in undoing the racial equality progress of the post-Civil War Reconstruction era, and now Jim Crow segregation became the norm of the American South. The Supreme Court's decision in Plessy vs Ferguson made "separate but equal" the new law of the land, and America again became a legal apartheid state.

According to the Equal Justice Initiative's 2017 report Lynching in America, over 4,400 lynchings of African Americans occurred from 1877-1950. That is more than a lynching a week for 74 years.

During Jim Crow, America could not legally deny black people their humanity, but they could deny them the services that are afforded to human beings. Black people were denied education, housing, employment, and were expected to "know their place" as a perpetually subjugated people. Large prisons were erected on former plantations; black people were arrested for minor crimes and given long prison sentences doing manual labour on the same land their ancestors were forced to work as enslaved people.

As a result of Jim Crow, millions of African Americans fled the neo-slavery and terror of the South during the Great Migration, and racial tensions spread as other American cities did not welcome these domestic refugees. This is the same journey as the Underground Railroad, where prior to the Civil War enslaved African Americans escaped the South and sought refuge in Canada and the Northern parts of America.

The civil rights movement of the 1960s effectively ended Jim Crow, and African Americans began reclaiming the rights, specifically voting rights and freedom of movement, they had previously won in the 1860s, but it is a long road to dismantle systemic and legalised racism and segregation.

Obama's election in 2008 was a monumental event in American society, but it did not magically erase the systemic racism woven into America's social fabric and the 2012 killing of Trayvon Martin, 17, helped launch the Black Lives Matter movement to national attention.

Trayvon was shot and killed by George Zimmerman as he walked home in his own neighbourhood because Zimmerman thought he looked suspicious. Martin was unarmed. Zimmerman pled self-defence and a jury found him not guilty of second-degree murder and manslaughter. Trayvon was one of countless African Americans killed by America's ethnocidal society that sanctions terror from both the government and civilians.

The unjust killing of black people by the police and racist vigilantes remained the norm during Obama's presidency, but now the black community could record and document these crimes on video, and had a president who would defend them. Obama famously said: "If I had a son, he'd look like Trayvon."

The emergence of the Black Lives Matter movement and other protests under Obama occurred because black Americans were confident that the White House would listen to their cries of "I can't breathe" and make American society finally equitable and just. Under Trump those cries have fallen on deaf ears and tensions have escalated.

America has much work to do to fix our racial tensions because our divisions and inequality are forged in our ethnocidal roots. We need to reform the policing of a nation nearly the size of a continent with over 300 million people, but we also need to make our education, healthcare, and housing systems, and every facet of our democracy more equitable.

Additionally, truth and reconciliation commissions, a national apology, reparations, holding evildoers accountable, and other processes nations have used to heal after a genocide, the linguistic sibling of ethnocide, will help America change course and forge equality and justice.

Should black Americans get slavery reparations?
Should the term 'racist' be redefined?
The awkward questions about slavery from US tourists
Also, America has rarely criminalised white supremacist hate and terror and instead has spent centuries normalising white terrorist groups, celebrating them as heroes, and letting them decide if their actions are evil or not. This is why the Confederacy is still celebrated today. Europe did not allow fascists and N***s to determine if their actions were good or not, but America has always given this luxury to racist slave-owners and their generational apologists and offspring. This must change.

Rwanda, Germany, and South Africa have reckoned with their troubled past to make a better future, but America has long preferred to ignore the past, and proclaim the inevitability of progress.

America today must define and confront the Original Sin of slavery, ethnocide, and the cultural destruction it has inflicted upon all Americans, past and present. Otherwise we will fail to make a better future, and will continue our regression.

Barrett is a writer, journalist and filmmaker focusing on race, culture and politics

English: Wednesday 3 June 2020French: Mercredi 3 juin 2020George Floyd: Crowd gathers at Belfast City Hall for protestMa...
10/06/2020

English: Wednesday 3 June 2020
French: Mercredi 3 juin 2020

George Floyd: Crowd gathers at Belfast City Hall for protest

Many of the demonstrators were wearing face masks
A large crowd has gathered at Belfast City Hall to protest over the death of George Floyd.

Mr Floyd, an African-American man, died in policy custody in the United States nine days ago.

His death has led to widespread demonstrations and civil unrest in the US.

The protests have spread to the UK and Republic of Ireland, with the demonstration in Belfast attracting a large number of people.

Protests began in the US after a video showed Mr Floyd, 46, being arrested on 25 May in Minneapolis and a white police officer continuing to kneel on his neck even after he pleaded that he could not breathe.

The officer, Derek Chauvin, has been charged with second-degree murder.

Three other officers present at Mr Floyd's death face counts of aiding and abetting murder.

Jolene Francis, who helped to organise the Belfast rally, told the BBC she wanted to send a message of solidarity to "our friends over in America".

She said: "We see them, we hear them, we empathise with them and we refuse to be silent any longer, even if it's not an issue that's happened in Belfast specifically.

"There's a history of solidarity between us here in Belfast, and the black community in America, and we don't plan on having our voices silenced.

"I'm overwhelmed - masses and masses and masses of people. It's people of all colours and ages."

She added that while social distancing was important, she believed there was a "social responsibility to show our solidarity and demand justice against racial discrimination".

Asked about the rally, Stormont's Economy Minister Diane Dodds told the executive's daily coronavirus press briefing she understood why people wanted to demonstrate, but large gatherings could pose a risk to curbing the spread of Covid-19.

She said: "We have all watched with horror the video of the death of George Floyd.

"Many people are concerned to make their voice heard and to let the authorities know they stand in solidarity.

"However for us in the here and now, controlling the rate of the virus is really important.

"It is incumbent upon all of us to act responsibly and practise social distancing.

"While we may want to stand in solidarity with those in the US and the Floyd family, who have been grievously hurt, we have to have a responsibility to ourselves and others in our immediate vicinity."

Northern Ireland's Justice minister Naomi Long also said she was concerned about the numbers of people who had come together to protest.

In a tweet, Mrs Long said while she was fully sympathetic to protestors' "just cause", such a gathering at this time is "reckless and could endanger lives."

She added that she had discussed large gatherings with the PSNI Chief Constable Simon Byrne on Wednesday.

She tweeted: "Don't rely on enforcement, be responsible."

Why the US protests resonate in the UK
The last 30 minutes of George Floyd's life
The newly installed moderator of the Presbyterian Church in Ireland has warned US President Donald Trump to "be careful how you handle the Bible".

Mr Trump was pictured holding a Bible outside St John's Episcopal Church, near the White House, after saying he planned to "dominate the streets" and end civil unrest.

Speaking to BBC Radio Ulster's Evening Extra programme, the Reverend David Bruce said: "What provoked me to do this was the double symbolism of this head of state, standing outside a church building and holding a Bible at a time when his country is facing multiple and complex challenges

"The coronavirus and pandemic is hitting America very hard, you also obviously have the events following the killing of George Floyd and this terrible sight of riots.

"My concern is that when the Bible is handled it has to be handled carefully, it describes itself as like a two-edged sword, which means that it cuts one way, which you may predict, but then suddenly you find yourself being mastered by it, it turns itself on you.

"There are multiple examples in history of politicians who have got this wrong."

In a debate in the Northern Ireland Assembly on Monday, members from across the chamber spoke out against the circumstances which led to Mr Floyd's death.

A number of MLAs also condemned the violence which has erupted at some of the protests in the US.

Meanwhile, Derry and Strabane District Council has opened an online book of condolence in memory of Mr Floyd.

Address

Bromley

Alerts

Be the first to know and let us send you an email when Justice For Inner Planets Lives Matter posts news and promotions. Your email address will not be used for any other purpose, and you can unsubscribe at any time.

Share