Governor Cooper has called up the National Guard to Raleigh and Charlotte after peaceful protests turned chaotic Saturday night, resulting in the destruction of property.ย ย 

Raleighโ€™s protestย began as a peacefulย yet powerful demonstration opposing systemic police violence after George Floyd,ย a black man, was killed by a white Minneapolis police officer. But later in the evening, things took a dark turn. Police deployed tear gas and rubber bullets at protesters and, in an ensuing riot,ย countless windows downtown were shattered, businesses were looted, and fires were started.ย 

Twelve people were arrested and five police officers were hospitalized following the riot.ย 

On Sunday evening, Cooper expressed his grief at those eventsย but also his support of the protesters who gathered to make their voices heard. Their pain, he said, is valid, and their voices must be heard.ย 

“Theseย scars mark generations of trauma that black people and other communities of color continue to suffer, trauma that has too often gone unrecognized in our country. Weโ€™ve had moments of heightened awareness, some here in our own state, but they faded from the headlines too fast,โ€ย Cooper said.

“When you see George Floyd on the ground begging for air, you realize that we have so much work to do,” Cooperย continued. “For people of color, these are not justย headlines though, they are life and death warnings. They are stark instructions from parents to children on how to stay safe in their own communities. They are heartbreakingย memorials for people who should not be dead.โ€

But violence, Cooper said, will not be tolerated. To that end, he has called in the National Guard at the request of local law enforcement. The guardsmen have been trained in โ€œcivil disturbancesโ€ and protecting public infrastructure.

The widespread destructionย is just another blow for downtown businesses that have endured more than two months of financial losses duringย the coronavirusย pandemic. On Sunday morning, the streets downtown were covered in shattered glass from windows, trash from upturned garbage bins, and empty tear gas canisters.ย 

Cooper condemned the violence as a distractionย from the meaningful protest that occurred earlier.ย 

โ€œThatโ€™s wrong and must be stopped, but Iย fear the cry of the people is being drowned out by the noise of these riots,โ€ย Cooper said. โ€œLet me be clear about one thing: People are more important than property. Black lives do matter.โ€

He continued: โ€œSystemic racism faced by people of color must be addressed.โ€ย Cooper called on North Carolinian to do more than talk about ending racismโ€”โ€œdo the work.โ€ย 

โ€œIf we donโ€™t, we havenโ€™t learned anything,โ€ย Cooper said.ย 

Due to the damage, Wake County will close the courthouse, Justice Center, county office building, and Public Safety Center on Monday.ย 


Contact Raleigh news editor Leigh Tauss at [email protected].ย 

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