Ferguson marks anniversary of notorious US shooting

Ferguson marks anniversary of notorious US shooting
Updated 09 August 2015 23:25
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Ferguson marks anniversary of notorious US shooting

Ferguson marks anniversary of notorious US shooting

FERGUSON, Missouri: Several hundred people gathered in Ferguson, Missouri, on Sunday to mark the anniversary of the shooting death of an unarmed black teenager by a white police officer that sparked protests and a national debate on race and justice.

Some pushed children in strollers as crowds of white, black, old and young people gathered at the spot in this mostly black St. Louis suburb where Michael Brown, 18, was fatally shot on Aug. 9, 2014.
After 4-1/2 minutes of silence to represent the roughly 4-1/2 hours that Brown’s body lay in the middle of the street after he was shot, two white doves were released. The crowd then started a silent march to honor Brown and others who have died at the hands of police. Rallies were planned in other cities, including New York.
Brown’s shooting sparked months of protests, including incidents of rioting and arson. But it also gave life to a new movement under the “Black Lives Matter” banner that has pushed for better treatment of minorities by police.
Organizers of Sunday’s events say their aim is to keep alive a national movement fueled by the police killing of Brown and other unarmed black men in US cities including New York, Cincinnati, Baltimore and North Charleston, South Carolina.
Another name was added to that list on Friday when unarmed 19-year-old Christian Taylor, a black college student, was shot dead by a white police officer in Arlington, Texas.
Arlington police said Taylor was shot as police investigated a burglary at a car dealership in the Dallas-area city. The FBI has been asked to help investigate the shooting.
In Ferguson, a makeshift memorial of teddy bears, candles and flowers has been rebuilt on the quiet residential road where Brown died. A plaque featuring a metallic dove has been installed on the sidewalk a few feet from the spot where Brown died, and the street where Brown’s blood pooled has been repaved.
Hazel Bland, 51, who lives in the Canfield Green apartment complex where Brown was killed, said she thinks about the shooting every day.
“It is really sad. You never think this would happen, all these police officers killing all these people. I really hate that it happened,” Bland said as she watched prayer sheets being handed out on Sunday.
At the memorial, Brown’s father, Michael Brown Sr., wore a T-shirt bearing his son’s image and the slogan “Chosen for Change.” Others held “Black Lives Matter” banners and signs calling for justice for those killed by police.