Governor of Missouri orders withdrawal of forces from St Louis suburb where police killed an unarmed black teenager.
The governor of Missouri has ordered the withdrawal
of National Guard troops from Ferguson, where tensions have eased after
sometimes violent protests were staged nightly since police killed an
unarmed black teenager.see more below...
Peaceful demonstrations overnight Wednesday were the calmest street
gatherings in the small St Louis suburb since riots erupted over the
August 9 shooting of 18-year-old Michael Brown by a police officer.
The controversial shooting by Officer Darren Wilson prompted angry
demonstrations along with looting and random gunfire from largely black
crowds.
Police have used tear gas and heavy armoured vehicles to clear the
streets and the Missouri National Guard was called in to help.
But the crowds have thinned, and the mood was decidedly less tense on
Thursday. Police said six people were arrested overnight - far fewer
than the scores detained on earlier nights of unrest.
Governor Jay Nixon, who ordered the National Guard to begin
withdrawing, said in a statement on Thursday: "We continue to see
improvement," the Reuters news agency reported. Situation 'de-escalating'
"Things are de-escalating," said Roy Harris outside Original Reds
B-B-Q, located on West Florissant Avenue where many of the protests have
taken place.
The restaurant has boarded up its windows but written in large
letters in red paint on the plywood planks is the promise: "We will be
back!!!" and workers were selling sandwiches in the parking lot next to
an outdoor meat smoker.
"We are seeing the judicial process beginning," said Harris, who
works as a youth counsellor in St Louis. "Voices are actually being
heard."
Ferguson is predominantly black, but its police force, political
leadership and public education administration are dominated by whites.
Activists and demonstrators have complained that Brown's death was the culmination of years of unfair police
targeting of blacks. Police militarisation
In Washington, Missouri Senator Claire McCaskill announced she would lead a Senate hearing next month to look at the militarisation of local police departments.
A US military programme that sends armoured cars, camouflage and
other battlefield equipment to police departments has come under
scrutiny as the protesters in Ferguson have been met by heavily armed
police clad in body armour and driving heavy armoured vehicles.
US Attorney General Eric Holder has said such displays should stop.
"At a time when we must seek to rebuild trust between law enforcement and the local community, I am deeply
concerned that the deployment of military equipment and vehicles sends a conflicting message," Holder said last week.
A grand jury met on Wednesday to begin hearing evidence in the Brown case.
The process could take into October before the panel releases its
findings, said St Louis County Prosecuting Attorney Bob McCulloch.
McCulloch, who is responsible for deciding whether to pursue criminal
charges against the police officer, has held the top county
prosecutor's job for 23 years and has promised an impartial
investigation.
Many Ferguson residents, angry that the police officer in question is
not in custody and has gone into hiding, fear that if there is no
indictment, more street violence is inevitable.
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