Protesters to white nationalist speaker
at University of Florida: 'Go home Nazis'
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[October 20, 2017]
By Zachary Fagenson
GAINESVILLE, Fla. (Reuters) - Protesters
shouted "Go home Nazis" as a white nationalist gave a speech on Thursday
at the University of Florida, where hundreds of police set up barricades
and separated supporters and demonstrators to guard against violence.
Richard Spencer's event at the university in Gainesville, which prompted
the governor to declare a state of emergency to prepare for possible
conflict, came about two months after rallies by neo-Nazis and white
supremacists in Charlottesville, Virginia, led to a deadly clash with
counter-protesters.
The violence on Aug. 12 added fuel to a national debate on race, and
Republican President Donald Trump came under fire for blaming both sides
for the melee.
White supremacists have been working to bring Spencer to various public
universities, saying he has a constitutional right to free speech. The
effort has forced college leaders to allow what they see as hate speech
on campus and provide security to prevent violent clashes.
On Thursday, several hundred protesters shouting: "We don't want your
Nazi hate" marched outside a campus performing arts center where Spencer
spoke.
The protests were mostly peaceful but there were a few scuffles that
left five people with minor injuries, the university said in a
statement.
Two people were arrested, including a man hired as security for media
for illegally carrying a firearm on campus, the Alachua County Sheriff's
Office said. Another man wearing a T-shirt emblazoned with swastikas
emerged from a crowd of protesters with a bloody lip.
Inside the venue, Spencer and protesters yelled at one another, and he
criticized them for trying to suppress his speech.
"I’m not going home," said Spencer, who heads the National Policy
Institute, a nationalist think tank, and promoted the Charlottesville
rally. "We are stronger than you and you all know it!"
He appeared to have few supporters in the crowd. About 15 white men, all
dressed in white shirts and khaki pants, raised their hands when Spencer
asked who identified with the alt-right, a loose grouping characterized
by a rejection of mainstream politics that includes neo-Nazis, white
supremacists and anti-Semites.
Spencer left the campus soon after the event ended, university public
safety officials said on Twitter. Police worked to separate those who
attended the event as they left the venue from protesters gathered
nearby.
[to top of second column] |
A man walks with a bloody lip as demonstrators yell at him outside
the location where Richard Spencer, an avowed white nationalist and
spokesperson for the so-called alt-right movement, is delivering a
speech on the campus of the University of Florida in Gainesville,
Florida, U.S., October 19, 2017. REUTERS/Shannon Stapleton
One Spencer supporter appeared to have been sprayed in the face with
an irritant. Police were not immediately available to speak about
the incident.
'LOVE WINS'
Anais Edwards, 26, was inside the venue and supported those trying
to disrupt Spencer.
"I’m really proud of how our community came together. Many of them
were willing to stand up and not let him speak," Edwards said.
The university said it did not invite Spencer to speak but was
obligated by law to allow the event. The school said it would spend
more than $500,000 on security, and the National Policy Institute is
paying more than $10,000 to rent the facility and for security
within the venue.
"Despite our worst fears of violence, the University of Florida and
the Gainesville community showed the world that love wins,”
University of Florida President Kent Fuchs said in a statement after
the event.
The Southern Poverty Law Center, which monitors U.S. hate groups,
said Spencer was "a radical white separatist whose goal is the
establishment of a white ethno-state in North America."
An outspoken supporter of Trump during the 2016 campaign, Spencer
rose from relative obscurity after widely circulated videos showed
some Trump supporters giving Nazi-style salutes to Spencer during a
gathering in Washington to celebrate the Republican candidate's win.
Trump condemned the meeting.
The death in Charlottesville, home to the flagship campus of the
University of Virginia, occurred as counter-protesters were
dispersing. A 20-year-old man who is said by law enforcement to have
harbored Nazi sympathies drove his car into the crowd, killing a
32-year-old woman.
(Reporting by Zachary Fagenson; Writing by Jon Herskovitz and
Colleen Jenkins; Editing by Dan Grebler and Peter Cooney)
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