Philadelphia lifts curfew after unrest over police killing

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NEW YORK, Oct 30, 2020 (BSS/AFP) – Philadelphia’s mayor said Thursday a
curfew he had put in effect the previous evening over unrest that followed
the police killing of a Black man would not be maintained for a second night.

Mayor Jim Kenney nonetheless called on residents to stay home except in
case of emergency.

“There will not be a citywide curfew this evening,” Kenney wrote on
Twitter.

“However, we encourage residents to remain home, unless travel is
necessary.”

The curfew had been in effect overnight in Pennsylvania’s largest city
after unrest triggered by Monday’s fatal police shooting of 27-year-old
Walter Wallace, which was captured on video posted to social media.

Thousands of people had taken to the streets, with looting and violence
breaking out. Fifty-seven officers have been injured, one seriously, a police
spokesman said.

The two days of unrest have also seen 210 arrests.

The city was calmer Wednesday night, AFP journalists reported, but a number
of stores were still damaged or looted.

Police shot Wallace, who was carrying a knife, after he refused to drop the
weapon as his mother tried to restrain him.

A lawyer for Wallace’s family, Shaka Johnson, said he was bipolar and the
call to emergency services was for an ambulance.

Johnson also said police had fired 14 times when only once could have
diffused the danger. Wallace’s father has asked why officers did not use stun
guns instead.

The two officers, whose names have not been released, have been suspended.

Police and prosecutors are investigating the killing, and Philadelphia
Police Commissioner Danielle Outlaw has pledged transparency.

Kenney said Thursday he hoped to soon make public footage from cameras worn
by the police officers that could help clarify the circumstances of the
shooting.

Johnson was quoted by local media saying that the footage, viewed by the
family on Thursday, showed Wallace “in obvious mental health crisis” and
family members yelling “he’s mental.”

According to the report in the Philadelphia Inquirer, Johnson said one of
the officers yelled “shoot him.”

Wallace’s death and the subsequent demonstrations and unrest have reignited
a political clash between Republicans and Democrats days before the
presidential election.

Pennsylvania is a key battleground state in the race between President
Donald Trump, who has focused on the unrest to bolster his claims to be the
“law-and-order” candidate, and his Democratic challenger Joe Biden.

The US has seen waves of race-related protests and rioting since the police
killing of African American George Floyd in May in Minnesota.