HuffPo | The mayor of Ferguson, Missouri, says there's no racial split in his
community and that nearly all residents would agree with him, despite
over a week of violent clashes between protesters and police over the
death of Michael Brown, an unarmed black teenager fatally shot by a
white police officer.
"There's not a racial divide in the city of
Ferguson," Mayor James Knowles said Tuesday in an interview on MSNBC's
"NewsNation" with Tamron Hall. "That is the perspective of all residents
in our city. Absolutely."
He later put the level of community
support "in the 95th percentile" in terms of how local leaders have been
responding to the situation.
A visibly perplexed Hall pressed
Knowles on how he could say that, given the week's events: a militarized
and mostly white police force has been turning up nightly -- with tear
gas, armored vehicles and rubber bullets -- to counter a group of mostly
peaceful black protesters furious about the lack of answers surrounding
Brown's death. In a city that is 67 percent black, just three of the
city's 53 officers are African-American, and reports have found a high incidence of racial profiling. In 2013, 86 percent of Ferguson police stops and 92 percent of their searches were of black people, according to a 2013 report from the Missouri attorney general.
Knowles
conceded that more needs to be done to diversify the police force. But
he pinned the nightly violence on the streets on a small group of people
and said it isn't representative of the community of roughly 22,000.
"The
city of Ferguson has been a model for the region about how we can
transition from a community that was predominantly white middle-class to
a community that is predominately African-American middle-class,"
Knowles said. "We're all middle-class residents who believe in the same
shared values. Those are the things we've been focusing on."
0 comments:
Post a Comment