Berkeley largely quiet after Ann Coulter
speech cancelation
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[April 28, 2017]
By Ann Saphir
BERKELEY, Calif. (Reuters) - Police at the
University of California at Berkeley braced for civil unrest on Thursday
in the aftermath of a canceled speech by conservative commentator Ann
Coulter, but the campus remained tranquil through the day while hundreds
of her supporters rallied nearby.
Some in the pro-Coulter crowd engaged in a brief shouting match with
counter-demonstrators who confronted them on the edge of a Berkeley city
park several blocks from campus late in the afternoon, but police
managed to keep the two sides apart.
Coulter, one of America's best-known and most provocative pundits on the
political right, said on Wednesday that she no longer intended to defy
university officials by speaking on campus without their permission.
She left open the possibility of paying a visit to supporters at the
school, long a bastion of liberal student activism and the Free Speech
Movement protests of the 1960s. But as of late Thursday, Coulter was
nowhere to be seen.
Still, a crowd of at least 300 people, some carrying American flags,
some wearing helmets or baseball caps emblazoned with President Donald
Trump's campaign slogan, "Make America Great Again," staged a peaceful
rally at Martin Luther King Jr. Civic Center Park in downtown Berkeley.
Tensions mounted as the rally ended and a group of at least 100
anti-Trump demonstrators emerged to confront a roughly equal number of
pro-Trump, pro-Coulter protesters in front of Berkeley High School,
adjacent to the park.
A line of a few dozen riot police quickly moved into the middle of the
street to form a human barrier between the opposing groups, as the two
sides shouted at each other.
Earlier, city police officers reported two arrests - one for a weapons
violation and another for drug possession.
Several blocks away on campus, several dozen UC Berkeley police and
other local law enforcement officers stood by in Sproul Plaza, lined
with orange barricades in anticipation of demonstrations that had yet to
materialize by late afternoon.
Campus and local authorities said they were taking the potential for
lawlessness seriously following several episodes of politically fueled
disturbances.
In February, protesters opposed to an appearance by Milo Yiannopoulos,
then a senior editor for the conservative Breitbart News website, set
fires, broke windows and clashed with police on campus, prompting
cancellation of his speech.
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Police detain a person as they work to keep opposing protesters
apart over the cancelation of conservative commentator Ann Coulter's
speech at the University of California, Berkeley, in Berkeley,
California, U.S., April 27, 2017. REUTERS/Stephen Lam
And in March and again in April, opposing groups from the far-right
and far-left skirmished violently near campus.
UC Berkeley Chancellor Nicholas Dirks cited all three incidents in
explaining why the school balked at Coulter's original plans to
speak on campus on Thursday.
University officials said organizers erred by inviting Coulter
without notifying campus officials in advance, as is required of all
student groups, and by failing to submit to a "security assessment"
to determine a suitable venue for the event. UC Berkeley officials
denied that Coulter was unwelcome because of her politics.
After initially barring a Coulter speech for Thursday, university
officials proposed moving the event to next Tuesday. Coulter said
she could not make it then and accused the school of trying to limit
her audience by choosing a date that fell in a study week ahead of
final exams.
Coulter then insisted she would go through with her speech on
Thursday, despite university objections. But she changed her mind
after student organizers withdrew their invitation, though they
vowed to press ahead with a lawsuit filed on Tuesday accusing UC
Berkeley of suppressing freedom of speech.
(Additional reporting by Noel Randewich in San Francisco, Mark
Hosenball in Washington and Jonathan Allen in New York; Writing and
additional reporting by Steve Gorman in Los Angeles; Editing by
Simon Cameron-Moore and Bill Rigby)
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