Minneapolis crews clearing intersection where George Floyd died
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[June 04, 2021]
By Nicole Neri and Jonathan Allen
MINNEAPOLIS (Reuters) -Work crews in
Minneapolis on Thursday took down barricades that had stopped most
vehicles from driving through the intersection where George Floyd was
murdered by a police officer just over a year ago, though activists
quickly replaced them with makeshift barriers.
Some activists oppose the city's effort to reopen the intersection at
Chicago Avenue and 38th Street to vehicles. It has been closed off since
the murder, a kind of autonomous zone in the middle of the city known as
George Floyd Square.
Some were seen arguing with the men who arrived unannounced before dawn
with forklift trucks to move the concrete barriers the city installed
about a year ago after demonstrators first filled the intersection.
Some other people dragged tables and other makeshift barricades into the
street, continuing to block traffic.
Mayor Jacob Frey previously said the city would reopen the intersection
to vehicles some time after the trial of Derek Chauvin, the white
policeman who was captured on video kneeling on the neck of Floyd, a
46-year-old Black man in handcuffs, for more than nine minutes during an
arrest on May 25, 2020. Floyd's death sparked protests against police
brutality and racism around the world.
A jury found Chauvin, 45, guilty of murder in April, leading to
impromptu street parties at the intersection, which is marked by a
towering sculpture of a raised Black fist in the middle of the road,
surrounded by a small garden planted with flowers.
Activists have vowed not to relinquish the surrounding streets until a
list of 24 demands are met, including reopening investigations
into other local Black men killed by police. Some local residents and
businesses support the activists, while others want traffic flow to
return to normal.
Early on Thursday morning, city workers joined
members of the Agape Movement, a local community group that helps
provide security in the neighborhood, to move barricades from the
roadway, placing them around the signs, flowers and artwork that mark
the spot where Floyd died.
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Community members gather after city employees began to reopen George
Floyd Square, the area where George Floyd was killed in Minneapolis
police custody the year before, in Minneapolis, Minnesota, U.S.,
June 3, 2021. REUTERS/Nicole Neri
Frey joined other city officials at City Hall on Thursday to discuss
what he called a "phased reconnection" of George Floyd Square with
the rest of the city.
"This intersection will forever be changed and we need to be
investing in that transformation," Frey told reporters, repeating
his promise to preserve a permanent memorial to Floyd.
When reporters asked about the new impromptu barricades the
activists had installed on Thursday, Frey said the reopening process
will be "touch and go and difficult over the coming days," and that
he never thought it would reopen in a single day.
Activists held their own news conference at the intersection itself,
decrying the city and chanting: "No justice, no streets."
Jaylani Hussein, director of the Council on American-Islamic
Relations' Minnesota chapter, said the city was attacking the memory
of Floyd.
"They're not trying to drive cars through there, they're trying to
delete history," he said. "But we will not let them delete history."
(Reporting by Nicole Neri in Minneapolis and Jonathan Allen in New
York; Editing by Will Dunham and David Gregorio)
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