Predominantly Black armed protesters march through Confederate memorial
park in Georgia
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[July 06, 2020]
By Steve Gorman
(Reuters) - A predominantly Black group of
heavily armed protesters marched through Stone Mountain Park near
Atlanta on Saturday, calling for removal of the giant Confederate rock
carving at the site that civil rights activists consider a monument to
racism.
Video footage of the Independence Day rally posted on social media
showed scores of demonstrators dressed in black - many in
paramilitary-style clothing and all wearing face scarves - quietly
parading several abreast down a sidewalk at the park.
Many of the protesters carried rifles, including military-type weapons,
and some wore ammunition belts slung over their shoulders. Although
African Americans appeared to account for the vast majority of the
marchers, protesters of various races, men and women alike, were among
the group.
One video clip showed a leader of the demonstrators, who was not
identified, shouting into a loudspeaker in a challenge to white
supremacists who historically have used Stone Mountain as a rallying
spot of their own.
"I don't see no white militia," he declared. "We're here. Where ... you
at? We're in your house. Let's go."
John Bankhead, a spokesman for the Stone Mountain Memorial Association,
said the protesters were peaceful and orderly.
"It's a public park, a state park. We have these protests on both sides
of the issue from time to time. We respect people's First Amendment
right," Bankhead told NBC affiliate station WXIA-TV.
"We understand the sensitivities of the issue here at the park ... so we
respect that and allow them to come in as long as it's peaceful, which
it has been."
Stone Mountain, which reopened for the holiday weekend following a
weeks-long closure over the coronavirus, has faced renewed calls for its
removal since the May 25 death of George Floyd, an unarmed Black man, at
the hands of Minneapolis police.
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A man speaks into a bullhorn while pointing at the Confederate
Monument carved into granite on Stone Mountain while protesting the
monument at Stone Mountain Park in Stone Mountain, Georgia, U.S.
June 16, 2020. REUTERS/Dustin Chambers
Floyd's killing helped revive a long-simmering conflict between
groups seeking to do away with Confederate statues and sculptures,
which they see as pro-slavery symbols, and those who believe they
honor the traditions and history of the Deep South.
Nine stories high and spanning the length of a football field, the
bas-relief Stone Mountain sculpture carved into a granite wall
overlooking the Georgia countryside some 25 miles (40 km) east of
Atlanta remains the largest such monument to America's Civil War
Confederacy.
It features the likenesses of Jefferson Davis, who was president of
the 11-state Confederacy, and two of his legendary generals, Robert
E. Lee and Thomas "Stonewall" Jackson.
Stone Mountain has long held symbolism for white supremacists. The
Ku Klux Klan, a hate group that was formed by Confederate Army
veterans and has a history of lynchings and terror against Black
people, held its rebirth ceremony atop mountain in 1915 with flaming
crosses. Klansmen still hold occasional gatherings in the shadows of
the edifice, albeit now met with protesters behind police tape. Many
of those cross-burnings took place on or around July 4.
(Reporting by Steve Gorman in Eureka, California; Editing by
Clarence Fernandez and Daniel Wallis)
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