Two reporters arrested as crackdown on demonstrations in St Louis following killing of unarmed black 18-year-old.
A heavily armed, militarised police force fired teargas and rubber
bullets to force hundreds of protesters out of the centre of a small Missouri town on Wednesday, as a crackdown on demonstrations over the killing of an unarmed 18-year-old intensified.
Dozens
of officers, some carrying assault rifles, advanced with a pair of
armoured trucks on the young and predominantly African American crowd in
Fergsuon, after two glass bottles were thrown at their lines from a
largely peaceful protest against the shooting of Michael Brown, who was
black, by an officer from the city's overwhelmingly white police
department.
For hours, police snipers trained their weapons on
demonstrators who protested with their hands up as an emblem of peaceful
protest. When events escalated on a fourth night of tension in this
city of just 21,000 people, protesters described being subjected to
military-style tactics as they fled through gas-filled residential
side-streets.
Police clearing the main drag of Ferguson, a suburb of St Louis, also arrested two reporters,
including one from the Washington Post. Marty Baron, its editor,
condemned the arrest as "an assault on the freedom of the press to cover
the news". The Huffington Post, whose reporter was also detained, said
the journalists were subjected to "militant aggression"
and treated as "enemy combatants". A camera crew from al-Jazeera America said they were shot by rubber bullets.
The
White House said early on Thursday that Barack Obama had interrupted
his vacation on Martha's Vineyard, Massachusetts, to be briefed by the
US attorney general, Eric Holder, on the escalating clashes between
police and demonstrators.
The night's events were described as
"deeply troubling" by Jay Nixon, Missouri's governor, who will visit the
area on Thursday. "While we all respect the solemn responsibility of
our law enforcement officers to protect the public, we must also
safeguard the rights of Missourians to peaceably assemble and the rights
of the press to report on matters of public concern," he said.
Protesters
were angry at the shooting of Brown on Saturday afternoon by a Ferguson
city police officer, and at the response by authorities. Police have
said the shooting followed an assault on the officer. But a friend who
was walking with Brown said the 18-year-old was grabbed after declining a
request to get on to the pavement, and then shot repeatedly as he tried
to run away. The officer has still not been named. St Louis County
police are investigating.
After standing guard as demonstrators gathered through the afternoon
on Wednesday, the police began clearing West Florissant Avenue,
Ferguson's main street, as the evening drew in. Just before 7pm, they
evicted customers from a branch of McDonald's towards the eastern end of
the street.
Inside, working, were reporters Wesley Lowery of the
Washington Post and Ryan Reilly of the Huffington Post. In statements,
their publications said the pair were videoing and photographing the
police actions and were then arrested and handcuffed as they tried to
leave. The reporters were eventually released after spending about half
an hour in a cell.
"Police militarisation has been among the most
consequential and unnoticed developments of our time, and it is now
beginning to affect press freedom," said Ryan Grim, the Huffington
Post's Washington bureau chief.
At least 10 people were arrested
in all, according to police, including Antonio French, a St Louis city
alderman who had been observing the protests and covering them on social
media. French was reportedly charged with unlawful assembly.
At 8.40pm, at the other end of West Florissant, two bottles smashing
prompted a furious reaction from the police line. Protesters were warned
over a Tannoy to leave the area immediately or be arrested. "Your
peaceful protest is no longer peaceful," the police voice said.
When
the protesters refused to retreat, a high-pitched siren blared from a
police Swat truck and several canisters of teargas were fired towards
the crowd in quick succession. "Return to your vehicles, return to your
homes," the police Tannoy said. Yet protesters regrouped, linked arms
and continued to chant at the police, some screaming obscenities.
At
9.08pm, a barrage of gas canisters and flashbangs were shot at the
crowds, prompting chaos. Many protesters ran south down Lang Drive. But,
even as they fled, the police line continued to fire gas canisters and
crackers in their direction. No one could be seen throwing anything at
the officers.
Some canisters landed and emitted plumes of smoke in
the front gardens of residents as they sat inside their homes. Others
hit cars and trucks as people tried to escape.
"Our property value has gone down, our taxes have gone up and our
insurance has gone up because St Louis County came out here shooting at
these kids while they were sitting in the street," said one woman living
on Lang Drive, who declined to be named. "They started this."
Rubber
bullets were fired at people who remained on West Florissant. One young
man, who had his arms aloft in the "hands up – don't shoot" gesture
that has come to define these protests, was shot several times. After he
fell to the ground, he was pounced on by several officers.
"They
hit me on the hand with a teargas bomb," said Tony Giegers, 27. "It
exploded on me kind of like buckshot. It sprayed everywhere. It hit me
there on my hand and burned my hand. It's burning right now, it's
burning up." His friend DeJuan, 19, said he was struck in the right leg.
A
highly visible camera crew for al-Jazeera America reporting on the
clashes said that they, too, were shot at with rubber bullets. The
Guardian watched as a gas canister was fired directly at them as they
attempted to record a piece to camera. The crew and their presenter
fled.
"The police are responding with force, which you can
understand to a certain degree," said Justin, a 29-year-old protester.
"But this amount of force was unwarranted. This is an abuse of force. No
one is firing guns at them or running at them. This is an overreach.
"Were people yelling at them? Were people shouting obscenities? Yes,
that's normal. But no one rioted, no one looted, no one threatened to
harm anyone. This is getting out of control. It's like a military
action."
"They militarised the police in this small county in
Missouri," said a man who gave his name as Kevvy. "They got military
trucks and people coming in from all over the state just for a protest
at something they did."
Brian Schellman, a spokesman for St Louis
County police, told the Guardian at the law enforcement command centre
late on Wednesday that chiefs would review tactics after the night's
events. "Our commanders are definitely going to review and see if we can
do something better," he said. However Schellman said that the officers
involved "acted with great restraint". "Bottles were being thrown at
them; we had molotov cocktails being thrown; we had a police officer
break an ankle from a thrown brick. So when the assaults start coming on
police officers that's the measures that are taken. We don't wanna have
to use gas on anybody."
Schellman said he could not say whether any bottles struck officers.
However, he said, "the fear of threat like that is still construed as an
assault. Injury does not have to happen for an assault to happen."
He
said that police did not yet know whether they would repeat the tactics
on Thursday if protesters turned out again, defying a request from the
city to demonstrate only in daylight hours.
Some said they would.
"We got to retaliate to the force they are using," said Kevvy. "If they
try and hurt us we try and hurt them. That's just the way it is. People
that live in this community, people out here for Mike Brown, people
that's black."
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