In Portland, some Black activists frustrated with white protesters
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[August 01, 2020]
By Deborah Bloom
PORTLAND (Reuters) - A small group of Black
teenage girls carrying megaphones stood in front of the federal
courthouse in downtown Portland near midnight on Thursday facing a
largely white band of protesters.
"I'm done with y'all focusing on all these white folk," said 17-year-old
Erandi, who asked to be identified only by her first name. "This is a
Black Lives Matter movement."
And as it happened, Portland had its first night in weeks without tear
gas https://www.reuters.com/article/us-global-race-protests/portland-has-night-without-tear-gas-as-feds-withdraw-idUSKCN24W24M
after state police took over from federal agents guarding a courthouse
that has been the focal point of violence between protesters and those
agents.[nL2N2F20XI]
For over two months, the nightly Black Lives Matter protests have
followed a familiar pattern.
A peaceful demonstration against racial injustice and police brutality
begins at nightfall at the central police precinct.
They are more organic than organized. Protesters chant: "George Floyd.
Breonna Taylor. Black Lives Matter." A microphone is passed around to
whoever wants to speak. The scenes feel festive at times, with drumbeats
and tambourines, and a grill that serves food at all hours. On one
night, a man holding a microphone raps to the crowd: "On the Portland
streets/We're taking it back/Wearing a mask 'cuz they shoot me with
gas."
President Donald Trump at a White House news conference on Thursday
called the protesters "professional agitators, professional anarchists"
and said the federal agents deployed there would "clean out this beehive
of terrorists." Portland has become a prime target of Trump's "law and
order" re-election campaign.
But the reality on the ground is as murky as the nightly clouds of tear
gas had been. There are no clear leaders or structure to these
demonstrations, and as midnight looms the focus moves to a small band of
mainly white people trying to attack the courthouse throwing fireworks
and objects at police and agents over a fence guarding the building.
The New York Times this week said an internal Department of Homeland
Security memo indicated the federal agents didn't understand the nature
of the protests, particularly those attacking the courthouse.
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A protester walks through tear gas deployed by federal law
enforcement officers during a demonstration against police violence
and racial inequality in Portland, Oregon, U.S., July 29, 2020.
REUTERS/Caitlin Ochs
“We lack insight into the motives for the most recent attacks,” the
memo said.
DIFFERENT PROTESTS
"There are two different protests. This is beautiful," said Ngee Gow,
22, pointing to the main body of demonstrators at the central police
precinct. "This is destruction," he said, nodding to those waiting
to confront federal agents outside the courthouse.
Suburban mothers, veterans and healthcare workers joined anti-racism
demonstrations in early July to oppose the federal intervention and
to try to tone down the violence. The Black demonstrators initially
welcomed the moms - and dads who came with leaf blowers to disperse
the tear gas - but are now frustrated with the band of midnight
provocateurs at the courthouse.
Portland is one of the whitest cities in the United States, with
only three percent of residents identifying as African-American.
Though residents there are overwhelmingly progressive, the city
itself is still very segregated, a legacy of Oregon's racist past as
the only state to ban Black people when it was founded.
"We're fighting with our hearts here," Erandi, the Black teenager
told Reuters. "We need these white people to acknowledge that this
isn't a bonfire. This isn't just a party."
Huddled with Erandi and a few other Black demonstrators, Gow looked
on disappointedly at the boisterous crowd in front of the
courthouse, chanting "Feds go home."
"It's about Black lives. Period," Gow said. "If you really want to
respect Black lives, and if you really want to respect Breonna
Taylor and George Floyd, then you'd be listening to the movement
instead of antagonizing police."
(Reporting by Deborah Bloom; writing by Bill Tarrant; editing by
Grant McCool)
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