Confederate
flag to fall from South Carolina state capitol
Send a link to a friend
[July 10, 2015]
By Harriet McLeod
COLUMBIA, S.C. (Reuters) - The Confederate
battle flag, a symbol of both racism and southern pride, will be removed
on Friday from the South Carolina state Capitol grounds after the Civil
War banner fell from favor since the slaying of nine black churchgoers
in June.
|
The rebel flag, raised on state grounds more than 50 years ago at
the height of the U.S. civil rights movement, is due to be lowered
quietly at 10 a.m. EDT (1400 GMT).
It will be moved to the "relic room" of a military museum in the
state capital of Columbia to reside with other artifacts carried by
southern Confederate soldiers 150 years ago.
"We will bring it down with dignity," South Carolina Republican
Governor Nikki Haley said on Thursday as she signed into law the
legislation to remove it.
Haley called for the flag's relocation shortly after the killing of
nine black worshippers during a Bible study session on June 17 at a
historic black church in Charleston.
The white man charged in the killings, 21-year-old Dylann Roof,
appeared in photographs posing with a Confederate flag that surfaced
on a website bearing a racist manifesto. The image spurred
politicians and leading national retailers to pull the flag from
display.
In South Carolina, the first state to secede during the 1861-1865
U.S. Civil War, this week's debate in the state legislature brought
an emotional closure to a symbol long divisive in the state.
The Confederate flag waved atop the state capitol from 1961 to 2000,
when it was moved to a Confederate war memorial near the State House
entrance.
Critics now hope to remove it as quietly as possible.
[to top of second column] |
"What we don't want is a lot of controversy around it," said state
Representative Jerry Govan, a black Democrat, who recalled during
the legislative debate how he had nails thrown in his face when he
was a child by white youths in a pickup truck flying the Confederate
flag.
"This takes away a wedge issue that's been used for many years," he
said.
The Confederate flag's days as a public symbol – a flag or a state
emblem – are coming to an end with the passage of Thursday's law,
said Carole Emberton, Civil War expert at the University at Buffalo.
"Will people still wear the symbol on their t-shirts or fly it from
their homes? Sure they will. But as far as this flag symbolizing a
state or local government, that day is over."
(Writing by Letitia Stein; Editing by Paul Tait)
[© 2015 Thomson Reuters. All rights
reserved.]
Copyright 2015 Reuters. All rights reserved. This material may not be published,
broadcast, rewritten or redistributed.
|