UN to hold debate on racism, police brutality in US: Live updates

UN Human Rights Council in Geneva will hold debate on the issues at request of African countries.

Black Lives Matter - outside image- UN headline
  • The UN’s top human rights body agreed to a request from African countries to urgently debate racism and police brutality on Wednesday following unrest in the US and beyond over George Floyd’s death.

  • One of the four former Minneapolis police officers who was charged over Floyd’s death has been released on a $750,000 bail.
  • Floyd, a Black man, died on May 25 after a policeman knelt on his neck for nearly nine minutes. His death has sparked calls across the US for policing reforms and triggered global protests.

Here are the latest updates:

Monday, June 15

12:10 GMT – FIFA urges ‘tolerance’ after Trump’s anthem kneeling rebuke

FIFA has appealed for “tolerance, mutual respect and common sense” after US President Donald Trump denounced the annulment of a policy that required football players to stand during the national anthem.

“I won’t be watching much anymore!” Trump tweeted Saturday.

Trump retweeted a tweet by US Representative Matt Gaetz, who wrote: “I’d rather the US not have a soccer team than have a soccer team that won’t stand for the National Anthem.”

It was US captain Megan Rapinoe kneeling in support of Colin Kaepernick that led to the US Soccer Federation adopting the rule in 2017. It was annulled last week after American football leaders acknowledged a change in sentiment among the public since the death of Floyd sparked global anti-racism protests.

10:40 GMT – Black Americans disproportionately die in police Taser confrontations: Reuters 

As police confront protesters across the US, they are turning to rubber bullets, pepper spray, tear gas and other weapons meant to minimise deaths in violent confrontations.

But some are using a weapon that has the potential to kill: The Taser. When those encounters have turned fatal, Black people make up a disproportionate share of those who die, according to a Reuters analysis.

Reuters documented 1,081 cases through the end of 2018 in which people died after being shocked by police with a Taser. At least 32 percent of those who died were Black, and at least 29 percent were white. African Americans make up 14 percent of the US population, and non-Hispanic whites, 60 percent

09:22 GMT – UN rights council agrees to debate on racism, police violence

The United Nations’s top human rights body will hold an urgent debate on allegations of “systemic racism, police brutality and violence against peaceful protests” in the US on Wednesday, a statement said.

The decision by the UN Human Rights Council followed a request last week by Burkina Faso on behalf of African countries, it said in a statement on Monday. 

“The death of George Floyd is unfortunately not an isolated incident,” the letter said. 

08:30 GMT – Australian Rules-Carlton forward Betts calls out online racism

Carlton Blues forward Eddie Betts has highlighted the racist abuse he receives on social media after a Twitter user posted a picture of a monkey in reference to the Australian Football League (AFL) player.

Aboriginal Australian footballer Betts, a victim of repeated incidents of online racial vilification in recent years, posted the tweet on his Instagram account.

“If at any time anyone is wondering why we work so hard to bring attention to the importance of stamping out racism, this is it,” the 33-year-old wrote.

“If ever there was a time where our focus on this needs to continue more than ever, it’s now.”

Eddie Betts
Carlton Blues forward Eddie Betts highlighted the racist abuse he receives on social media [File: Graham Denholm/Getty Images]

07:30 GMT – UN leaders issue call to end racism 

More than 20 senior African leaders in the UN have called on the world to “go beyond and do more” to end racism.

“Not enough can ever be said about the deep trauma and inter-generational suffering that has resulted from the racial injustice perpetrated through centuries, particularly against people of African descent. To merely condemn expressions and acts of racism is not enough,” the group said in an opinion piece. 

“Now is the time to move from words to deeds,” the piece read. 

The signatories included Tedros Ghebreyesus, head of the World Health Organization (WHO), Winnie Byanyima, executive director of UNAIDS, and Natalia Kanem, who runs the UN sexual and reproductive health agency.

06:45 GMT – UK PM Johnson criticises ‘distortion of our history’

Prime Minister Boris Johnson has said the United Kingdom cannot “photoshop” its cultural landscape and complex history as doing so would be a distortion of its past, amid a continuing dispute over the removal of statues of historical figures.

“If we start purging the record and removing the images of all but those whose attitudes conform to our own, we are engaged in a great lie, a distortion of our history,” Johnson wrote. 

Johnson also defended Winston Churchill and said it was “absurd and deplorable” that the former prime minister’s monument should have been in any danger.

Churchill
A worker cleans the Churchill statue in Parliament Square that had been spray-painted with the words ‘was a racist’ [Dan Kitwood/Getty Images]

06:35 GMT – Football must take ‘giant leap’ to fight racism: Neville

Former England international Gary Neville says words are not enough to combat racism in football and that he is “ashamed” he did not fight harder against it when he was a player.

The former Manchester United defender made the comments in the wake of Floyd’s death

“Forget campaigns. Forget words. It has to be actions,” Neville said ahead of the Premier League’s restart on Wednesday following a three-month stoppage due to the COVID-19 pandemic.

“We need to take a giant leap rather than minute steps each year.

“I’m not going to hide away from it. We need education, we need protocols and processes in place which basically reverse what’s been happening in our country.”

Gary Neville
Former England international Gary Neville said words are not enough to combat racism [File: Getty Images]

03:52 GMT – Trayvon Martin’s mother joins protest for racial equality

The mother of Trayvon Martin has joined hundreds of demonstrators at a rally in Miami, demanding racial equality following Floyd’s death last month at the hands of a white police officer in Minnesota.

Sybrina Fulton joined the demonstrators who carried signs that read “Stop Killing Us” and “We Are All Equal” at the Torch of Friendship, a 60-year-old monument erected as a welcoming beacon to the city’s Latin American and Caribbean neighbours. The protest organised by several churches was one of several across Florida on Sunday.

Fulton’s unarmed son, Trayon Martin, was killed by a neighbourhood watch volunteer, George Zimmerman, while walking back from a central Florida convenience store in 2012.

02:05 GMT – Brooks shooting declared a homicide

The Fulton County medical examiner’s office has ruled the death of Rayshard Brooks a homicide caused by gunshot wounds to the back.

An autopsy conducted on Sunday showed that the 27-year-old died from blood loss and organ injuries caused by two gunshot wounds, an investigator for the medical examiner said in a statement. The manner of his death was homicide, it added.

Brooks’s fatal encounter with police came after an employee of a Wendy’s restaurant in Atlanta phoned authorities to say that someone had fallen asleep in his car in the restaurant’s drive-through lane.

Sunday, June 14

20:50 GMT – Report says Black people most arrested for Chicago curfew violations

A new report says Black people made up 75 percent of those arrested in Chicago for alleged violations of a curfew put in place following demonstrations over Floyd’s death.

The Chicago Sun-Times analysed police data from the first five days of the curfew imposed on May 30 and lifted on June 7.

The racial disparity in Chicago, where Black people comprise about 30 percent of the population, drew criticism from the American Civil Liberties Union of Illinois.

A Chicago police spokesman says the department’s curfew enforcement was “universal” regardless of race or neighbourhood.

A peson holds sign during a protest over the death of George Floyd in Chicago, Saturday, May 30, 2020. Protests were held throughout the country over the death of George Floyd, a black man who died af
A protester holds a sign during a protest over the death of George Floyd in Chicago on May 30 [Nam Y Huh/The Associated Press]

20:40 GMT – Macron says colonial statues will not be removed

French President Emmanuel Macron has promised to stand firm against racism, while also insisting that France would not take down statues of controversial, colonial-era figures, as he addressed the issues for the first time since Floyd’s death in the US.

In a televised address to the nation on Sunday evening, Macron called for the nation’s “unity” at a key moment when the country is trying to put the coronavirus crisis behind it while being shaken by a series of protests against racial injustice and police brutality.

Echoing American protesters, demonstrators in France have expressed anger at discrimination within French society, particularly towards minorities from the country’s former colonies in Africa.

20:20 GMT – Beyonce demands justice for Breonna Taylor in letter to Kentucky attorney general

Performer Beyonce has written a letter to the Kentucky Attorney General Daniel Cameron demanding justice for Breonna Taylor, a 26-year-old emergency medical technician who was shot and killed when police raided her home in Louisville in March.

“Three months have passed – and Breonna Taylor’s family still waits for justice. Ms Taylor’s family has not been able to take time to process and grieve. Instead, they have been working tirelessly to rally the support of friends, their community and the country to obtain justice for Breonna,” Beyonce wrote. 

The letter goes on to demand that the officers involved be charged, that the investigation and prosecution be transparent, and that the Louisville police department’s response to the killing be investigated. 

19:40 GMT – District attorney to decide this week if officer in Brooks’s shooting will be charged

The Fulton County District Attorney Paul Howard has said a decision on whether charges will be brought against the officer who fatally shot Rayshard Brooks will be made this week. 

Howard, speaking to CNN, said Brooks “did not seem to present any threat to anyone”.

“The fact that it would escalate to his death seems unreasonable,” he added.

Howard said the charges of murder, felony murder or voluntary manslaughter are all being considered.

19:00 GMT – High-ranking house Democrat says Brooks incident ‘did not call for lethal force’

House of Representatives majority whip James Clyburn has said the Brooks incident did not call for deadly force.

“You wonder, sometimes, when you’re dealing with an issue like this out here for two or three weeks, and then you see a police officer still being insensitive to the life of a young African American man,” the South Carolina Democrat told CNN’s State of the Union.

“This did not call for lethal force. And I don’t know what’s in the culture that would make this guy do that. It has got to be the culture. It’s got to be the system,” he said.

Meanwhile, the US Senate’s only African American Republican, Tim Scott, in an interview with CNN, called the incident “far less clear” than the widely-condemned killing of George Floyd or other cases of police brutality.

18:20 GMT – Systemic racism slows economic growth: Dallas Fed chief

Systemic racism and high unemployment levels among Black and Hispanic Americans create a drag on the US economy, Dallas Federal Reserve President Robert Kaplan has said.

“A more inclusive economy where everyone has an opportunity will mean faster workforce growth, faster productivity growth and will grow faster,” Kaplan said on CBS’s Face the Nation.

Kaplan added he agreed with his counterpart at the Atlanta Federal Reserve Bank, Raphael Bostic, the Fed’s only African American policymaker, who on Friday called for an end to racism and laid out ways the US central bank can help.

17:40 GMT – Trump moved Tulsa rally date after learning about Juneteenth

President Donald Trump did not know the significance to African Americans of the date and location he chose for his first campaign rally since the coronavirus pandemic more than three months ago, key Republican supporters of the president in Congress have said. 

Trump had scheduled the rally for June 19, known as Juneteenth because it marks the end of slavery in the US. Tulsa, Oklahoma, the location for the rally, was the scene in 1921 of one of the most severe white-on-Black attacks in American history. 

Black community and political leaders denounced the move and called on Trump to reschedule. He resisted until late on Friday when, in a rare turnabout, Trump tweeted that he had moved the rally to this Saturday, June 20, out of respect for the view of supporters and others who had asked him to.

“The president moving the date by a day once he was informed on what the Juneteenth was, that was a good decision on his part,” said Senator Tim Scott, the only Black Republican senator, adding he did not know if Trump’s planners knew the significance of the date. 

17:00 GMT – At least seven Minneapolis police quit, seven more resigning: Report

At least seven Minneapolis police officers have quit and another seven are in the process of resigning, citing a lack of support from department and city leaders as protests over George Floyd’s death escalates.

Current and former officers told The Minneapolis Star Tribune that officers are upset with Mayor Jacob Frey’s decision to abandon the Third Precinct station during the protests.

Demonstrators set the building on fire after officers left. Protesters have also hurled bricks and insults at officers, numerous officers and protesters have been injured, and the state has launched a civil rights investigation into the department.

Minneapolise Police officers stand in a line while facing protesters demonstrating against the death of George Floyd outside the 3rd Precinct Police Precinct in Minneapolis, Minnesota. Members of the
Minneapolis police officers stand in line while facing protesters demonstrating against the death of George Floyd outside the 3rd Police Precinct in Minneapolis, Minnesota [Kerem Yucel/AFP]

16:30 GMT – Vermont governor says Black Lives Matter mural vandalised

A Black Lives Matter painting in front of Vermont’s statehouse has been vandalised in what the governor has described an “an effort to fuel hate and division”.

Governor Phil Scott, in a tweet, said the vandalism had been discovered early Sunday morning. He added he had instructed state police to aid local authorities in the investigation. 

“This act of vandalism only reinforces that we’re not immune to racism, divisiveness and hate in Vermont,” he wrote. “We must redouble our efforts to dismantle systemic racism and bigotry, and stay united as Vermonters.”

15:50 GMT – Lone Black Republican Senator says he is open to ‘decertification’ of bad police

Tim Scott, the only Black Republican member of the US Senate, has said he is open to exploring whether to enact a new law that would decertify bad police officers as part of a larger law enforcement reform package.

Speaking on CBS’s Face the Nation, Scott said a new policy to decertify police who engage in misconduct could be a compromise as he negotiates with Democrats, who have called more drastic measures such as ending the “qualified immunity” legal doctrine which helps shield officers from liability.

“I think there’s a way for us to deal with it,” said Scott, who has been tapped by the Republican leadership to oversee the drafting of new policing reform legislation. “Decertification would be a path that I would be interested in looking at.”

15:20 GMT – Video shows moments before deadly shooting of Rayshard Brooks

Footage released by investigators of the deadly police shooting of Brooks shows him telling officers he is not armed and consenting to a pat-down before he is killed. 

Brooks had been reported to police for sleeping in the drive-through of Wendy’s restaurant in Atlanta on Friday night. After telling Brooks to pull off to a side of the parking lot, the officers ask him if he is armed. 

“I just have money for gas and that’s it,” he responds. When asked if they can pat him down, Brooks consents: “Absolutely, that’s fine”.

After checking Brooks for weapons, the officers then administer a sobriety test, which Brooks reportedly failed.

As they attempt to handcuff him, a scuffle ensues. According to the Georgia Bureau of Investigation, surveillance footage from Wendy’s and witnesses cell phone footage “indicate” Brooks took one of the officer’s Tasers during the scuffle. At one point, Brooks, as he flees, appears to fire the taser at officer Garrett Rolfe, who then fires his gun three times at Brooks, fatally hitting him. 

14:50 GMT – Italians deface statue of journalist who had 12-year-old Eritrean bride

Protesters have scrawled ”rapist” and ”racist” on the statue of a late Italian journalist who had acknowledged having had a 12-year-old Eritrean bride while stationed in the Italian colony in the 1930s. 

The statue of Indro Montanelli, inside a Milan park that bears his name, has been a flashpoint in Italy’s Black Lives Matter protests, which have put renewed focus on Italy’s colonial past. Activists are also pushing for Italy to grant automatic citizenship to those born in Italy to parents who are permanent residents. 

Montanelli, who died in 2001 at the age of 92, was one of Italy’s most revered journalists, honoured by the Vienna-based International Press Institute in 2000 as among the 50 World Press Freedom Heroes.

milan statue
A municipal employee cleans a statue of a famous Italian journalist Indro Montanelli after it was stained with red paint and tagged with the inscription ‘racist, rapist’ [Miguel Medina/AFP]

14:15 GMT – Berlin demonstrators form human chain in message against racism

Demonstrators are forming a planned nine-kilometre (five-mile) chain in Berlin in a message against racism, among a range of other protests.

Organisers of Sunday’s “Indivisible” demonstration were told to require participants to wear masks, and protesters were also asked to maintain social distancing.

They were linked by coloured ribbons, forming what organisers called a “ribbon of solidarity” that stretched southeast from the Brandenburg Gate to the Neukoelln neighbourhood. Police said people appeared to be keeping up with safety protocols.

Berlin recently lifted coronavirus-related limits on the number of people who can attend demonstrations, though people are still required to keep at least 1.5 metres (5 feet) apart in public.

Berlin human chain
People participate in the Unteilbar (indivisible) Solidarity Chain demonstration in Berlin, Germany [Omer Messinger/EPA]

13:30 GMT – Family seek answers in death of Black man found hanging from tree in California

Amid protests against racial mistreatment and injustice across the US, protesters and the family of a 24-year-old Black man found hanging from a tree in Palmdale, California have called for answers. 

On Saturday, hundreds of people marched in Palmdale following the death of Robert Fuller who was found hanging from a tree near City Hall early on Wednesday. During the demonstration, Los Angeles Supervisor Kathryn Barger formally called for an investigation into the death by the state’s attorney general.

Authorities initially said the death appeared to be a suicide but are awaiting the results of an autopsy. 

“Everything that they’ve been telling us has not been right,” Fuller’s sister, Diamond Alexander, who was among the protesters said, the New York Times reported. “We’ve been hearing one thing. Then we hear another. And we just want to know the truth.”

“My brother was not suicidal. He wasn’t,” she added.


Hello, this is Joseph Stepansky in Doha taking over from my colleague Linah Alsaafin.


12:25 GMT – Fox News apologises for running digitally altered images in Seattle protest coverage

Fox News has apologised for running digitally altered and misleading photos on stories about Seattle’s Capitol Hill Autonomous Zone (CHAZ).

The zone had been taken over by protesters after Seattle police abandoned the East Precinct. Fox News website ran a photo of a man standing with an assault rifle in front of a smashed retail storefront, but the image was actually a mash-up of photos taken by different photographers from different days.

On Saturday, Fox issued an apology in an editor’s note on its website, sayings its home-page photos “did not clearly delineate” the splicing together of multiple images from different locations. “Fox News regrets these errors,” the note stated.

12:00 GMT – Tokyo marches in solidarity with George Floyd protests

Japanese Rally In Support Of Black Lives Matter
Protesters pose for a photograph at Yoyogi Park after a peaceful Black Lives Matter march in Tokyo, Japan [Takashi Aoyama/Getty Images]

Holding handmade signs that read “Black Lives Matter”, hundreds of people marched peacefully in Tokyo on Sunday, highlighting the outrage over the death of Floyd.

Mitsuaki Shidara, who works for a food maker, was in the crowd at Yoyogi Park, where the march began. He said Japan has plenty of discrimination problems, but they are overlooked.

“We are all human first, but we are divided by nationality, gender, religion, skin colour,” Shidara said, “What’s happening in the US shows racism is going on, even after 400 years,” said Shidara.

11:40 GMT – Fatal shooting of Rayshard Brooks: What we know so far

The killing of Rayshard Brooks, a 27-year-old Black man, late on Friday outside a fast-food restaurant in the US city of Atlanta has triggered protests and forced the city’s police chief to resign.

Police were called to the Wendy’s restaurant after a complaint that Brooks had fallen asleep in his car while waiting in the drive-through line, the Georgia Bureau of Investigation (GBI), which has opened an inquiry into the shooting, said on Saturday.

The GBI said Brooks failed a sobriety test and police attempted to take him into custody. A struggle between Brooks and the officers over a police taser followed. 

The GBI initially reported that the father of four, who had celebrated the birthday of his eight-year-old daughter earlier on Friday, was shot during the struggle.

Read more here.

10:48 GMT – Police release footage of struggle before Brooks shooting

The Atlanta Police Department on Sunday released body-camera and dashboard camera footage of the attempted arrest and fatal shooting of Rayshard Brooks outside a fast-food restaurant in Georgia’s capital on Friday.

Officers Garrett Rolfe and Devin Brosnan attempted to arrest Brooks after questioning him and getting him to perform sobriety tests.

Footage showed Rolfe attempting to put handcuffs on Brooks before a struggle begins.

Dash-cam footage showed Brooks, Brosnan and Rolfe on the floor before a taser is fired at Brooks. Three gunshots are then heard while the three are off-camera.

Brooks’s death sparked protests in Atlanta on Saturday night and the restaurant where Brooks was shot was set alight.

09:55 GMT – Police arrest more than 100 after London Black Lives Matter protests

London protests turn violent
Police take some protesters as clashes break out between protesters supporting the Black Lives Matter movement and far-right activists at Leicester Square in London [Anadolu Agency]

The British police said they have arrested more than 100 people after demonstrators, including far-right protesters, clashed with officers in London.

Hundreds of far-right protesters turned out on Saturday, many saying they wanted to “protect” monuments targeted recently by anti-racism protesters for links to slavery and colonialism.

The protests, attended by far-right groups including Britain First, turned violent when some scuffled with riot police and others hurled bottles, flares and smoke grenades at officers. Six police officers suffered minor injuries.

More Black Lives Matter protests are planned on Sunday after rallies in at least a dozen British towns and cities including Newcastle, Bristol, Chelmsford, Canterbury and Brighton, on Saturday.

Read more here.

08:35 GMT – Black Lives Matter protests in New Zealand

Thousands of New Zealanders turned out to Black Lives Matter protests in Auckland and Wellington on Sunday.

In Auckland, the protest ended at the US consulate, where protesters took a knee and observed a minute’s silence to commemorate George Floyd, who died at the hands of Minneapolis police last month. In Wellington, the capital, protesters marched to the grounds of Parliament, chanting “Black Lives Matter” and holding placards with slogans like “Racism is a pandemic, let’s fight it!”

Andrew Little, the country’s justice minister, spoke to the crowd outside Parliament, saying politicians and people needed to demand improved outcomes for Indigenous Maori.

08:11 GMT – Australian prime minister apologises over slavery comments

Black Lives Matter - Australian PM blog entry
Protesters participate in a Black Lives Matter rally at Langley Park in Perth, Australia to raise awareness of Aboriginal deaths in police custody [Richard Wainwright/EPA]

Scott Morrison has apologised for denying his country’s history with slavery, saying he was referring to the settlement of the first colony.

His remarks have angered some Indigenous Australians as well as descendants of Pacific Islanders who say their ancestors worked for little or no pay on sugar plantations.

“The comments I was referring to was how the first colony, New South Wales, was first established,” he said in a news conference in Canberra.

Dominic O’Sullivan from the Charles Sturt University said many Australians are not aware of their past.

“Australia has a habit of forgetting those bits of its history it doesn’t like, that could cause tension or embarrassment,” he said.

“While Morrison’s initial comment about denying the history of was simply a mistake, the fact that he retracted it so quickly was a sign that he had realised that he really couldn’t defend his position because what he said was not true and the evidence that it is not true is compelling.”

07:33 GMT – Atlanta officer fired after fatal shooting of Black man

Black Lives Matter - Atlanta officer fired blog entry
An officer talks with protesters near the Atlanta Wendy’s where Rayshard Brooks was shot and killed by police on Friday evening following a struggle in the restaurant’s drive-through line in Atlanta [Brynn Anderson/The Associated Press]

An Atlanta police officer was fired following the fatal shooting of Rayshard Brooks, a Black man, and another officer was placed on administrative duty, the police department announced early on Sunday.

The moves follow the resignation of Atlanta police chief Erika Shields, who stepped down as the Friday night killing of Brooks, 27, sparked a new wave of protests in Atlanta after turbulent demonstrations that followed the death of George Floyd in Minneapolis had simmered down.

The terminated officer was identified as Garrett Rolfe, who was hired in October 2013, and the officer placed on administrative duty is Devin Brosnan, who was hired in September 2018.

The police department also released body camera and dash-camera footage from both officers.

L Chris Stewart, a lawyer for Brooks’s family, said the officer who shot him should be charged for “unjustified use of deadly force, which equals murder”.

07:15 GMT – New Orleans protesters pull down bust, throw it in river

Black Lives Matter - New Orleans blog entry
Demonstrators in New Orleans pulled down the bust of John McDonogh, a slave owner who left his wealth to build schools, took the remains to the Mississippi River and rolled it into the water [Rebecca Santana/The Associated Press]

Protesters tore down a bust of slave owner John McDonogh – who left part of his fortune to New Orleans’ schools – and then took the remains to the Mississippi River and rolled it down the banks into the water.

The destruction is part of a nationwide effort to remove monuments to the Confederacy or with links to slavery as the country grapples with widespread protests against police brutality towards African Americans.

Police said in a statement that demonstrators at Duncan Plaza, which is across the street from City Hall, dragged the bust into the streets, loaded it onto trucks and took it to the Mississippi River where they threw it in.

When he died, McDonogh left a large portion of his money to New Orleans and Baltimore for schools, and many schools in New Orleans are named after him. The McDonogh Day celebration, in which schoolchildren across the city laid flowers at a different monument to McDonogh, was racially segregated and became the subject of boycotts in the 1950s, as African American children would have to wait for hours for white children to lay their flowers first.

06:55 GMT – More than 10,000 demonstrate against racism in Zurich

Black Lives Matter - Zurich protest blog entry
People demonstrate in Zurich against racism after the worldwide movement of the Black Lives Matter protest against the recent death of George Floyd [Ennio Leanza/EPA]

Demonstrators took to the streets of several Swiss cities to protest against racism, the news agency Keystone-SDA reported.

In Zurich alone, more than 10,000 people demonstrated, Keystone-SDA reported, citing city police.

The mostly young protesters held up signs with slogans taken from anti-racism and anti-police brutality rallies in the US including “White silence is violence” and “Black Lives Matter”.

Protesters also met in the capital Bern, Lausanne, and in St Gallen. During the demonstration in Zurich, people knelt several times to commemorate the brutal incident.

Hello, this is Linah Alsaafin taking over the blog in Doha from my colleagues in Kuala Lumpur.

05:35 GMT – US embassy in South Korea displays Black Lives Matter banner

The US embassy in Seoul draped a huge Black Lives Matter banner on its mission building and tweeted a picture of it in support of an anti-racism campaign across America.

“The US Embassy stands in solidarity with fellow Americans grieving and peacefully protesting to demand positive change. Our #BlackLivesMatter banner shows our support for the fight against racial injustice and police brutality as we strive to be a more inclusive just society,” the embassy tweeted, along with the picture of the banner in black and white.

US Ambassador to South Korea Harry Harris retweeted the message, adding “USA is a free and diverse nation … from that diversity we gain our strength.”

No comment was immediately available from the embassy on Sunday.

04:14 GMT – Protesters burn down Wendy’s in Atlanta where Black man was slain

Protesters have shut down a major highway in the US city of Atlanta and set fire to a Wendy’s restaurant where a Black man was shot by police as he tried to escape arrest in an incident caught on video and expected to fuel more nationwide demonstrations.

The unrest broke out after dark in Atlanta where, earlier in the day, Mayor Keisha Lance Bottoms said she had accepted the prompt resignation of police chief Erika Shields over the death on Friday night of 27-year-old Rayshard Brooks at the restaurant.

Images on local television showed the restaurant in flames for more than 45 minutes before fire crews arrived to extinguish the blaze, protected by a line of police officers. By that time, the building had been reduced to charred rubble next to a petrol station.

04:00 GMT – Missouri police chief on leave over inflammatory posts

A rural Missouri police chief has been placed on leave over inflammatory Facebook posts about protests over the death of George Floyd.

Keven Suedmeyer, police chief in Auxvasse, about 56 kilometres (35 miles) northeast of Jefferson City, was placed on administrative leave pending the outcome of an investigation, Mayor Tom Henage said Friday.

“Racism is not condoned or tolerated by the City of Auxvasse,” Henage said in a news release. When asked by the Jefferson City News-Tribune if that meant he considered the posts, which were on Suedmeyer’s personal Facebook page, to be racist, Henage said he did not.

Suedmeyer’s home phone rang unanswered on Saturday when The Associated Press tried to call him for comment.

In a May 31 post, Suedmeyer wrote that if someone stands in the street blocking traffic, that person deserves “to be run over. That will help clean up the gene pool.”

When Will Shackelford, a candidate for Callaway County western district commissioner, responded, “Have you come across any road blocks?”, Suedmeyer wrote, “Nope (and) I certainly won’t stop for them – though if they insist – I’ll identify myself – they can back down or get shot.”

On June 2, he wrote: “Corona virus coming to rioters everywhere Darwin – work your magic Time to ramp up the funeral industry.” A city alderman, Bret Barnes, was among Suedmeyer’s friends who hit “like” on the post.

Source: Al Jazeera, News Agencies