Advertisement

Trump says US will designate Antifa as a terrorist organisation

Members of an anti-fascist or Antifa group march as the Alt-Right movement gathers for a "Demand Free Speech" rally: AFP/Getty
Members of an anti-fascist or Antifa group march as the Alt-Right movement gathers for a "Demand Free Speech" rally: AFP/Getty

The Trump administration will move to designate the loose association of militant left-wing, anti-fascist demonstrators commonly known as "Antifa" as a terrorist organisation, the president has announced in a tweet.

"The United States of America will be designating ANTIFA as a Terrorist Organization," Donald Trump wrote amid a series of tweets on Sunday blaming violent outbursts and rioting at police brutality protests across America over the weekend on the group and other "Radical Left" elements.​

Earlier in the day, the president lauded the Minnesota National Guard for its efforts to keep the peace at protests in the state on Saturday.

"Congratulations to our National Guard for the great job they did immediately upon arriving in Minneapolis, Minnesota, last night. The Antifa led anarchists, among others, were shut down quickly," the president tweeted on Sunday, doubling down on his claim from the day before that "Antifa" and "the Radical Left" bear blame for protests turning violent.

Attorney General William Barr has echoed the president's notions of that left-wing elements have been responsible for violent brushes with law enforcement, looting, and vandalism in recent days in cities across America, from Atlanta to Salt Lake City to Los Angeles.

Crossing state crimes to participate in violent rioting is a felony that is charged at the federal level.

"Unfortunately, with the rioting that is occurring in many of our cities around the country, the voices of peaceful protests are being hijacked by violent radical elements," Mr Barr said in a statement released by the Justice Department on Saturday.

"In many places it appears the violence is planned, organized, and driven by far left extremist groups and anarchic groups using Antifa-like tactics," the attorney general said.

Meanwhile, local leaders in Minneapolis have emphasised that white supremacists and other malign outside actors — some possibly foreign — have also been responsible for inciting violence at protests there.

"We are now confronting white supremacists, members of organized crime, out of state instigators, and possibly even foreign actors to destroy and destabilize our city and our region," Minneapolis Mayor Jacob Frey said in a statement on Twitter on Saturday.

Thousands of Americans in cities all across the country took to the streets on Friday and Saturday to protest police brutality after an unarmed black man, George Floyd, died last week while being pinned to the ground by a Minneapolis police officer.

Mr Floyd, 46, died on 25 May after Minneapolis police officer Derek Chauvin knelt on his neck for several minutes even though Mr Floyd did not have a weapon and complained he couldn't breathe. Mr Floyd's death became a national cry for action against police brutality after videos emerged of the incident.

Mr Chauvin was arrested on Friday and charged with third-degree murder.

The protests against police brutality over the last several days in Minneapolis and other major US cities such as Atlanta, Brooklyn, Washington DC, and Chicago have led to heated confrontations between demonstrators and law enforcement, some of which have broken out into small pockets of violence. There have been several documented instances of looting, vandalism, and arson of entire buildings over the last week.

Thousands of Americans in cities all across the country were hit with pepper spray, tear gas, or police batons on Friday and Saturday.

Law enforcement units have fired rubber bullets at local journalists, and a CNN reporter and his production crew were arrested in Minneapolis on Friday for shooting live film in a part of the city that the Minnesota state patrol was trying to block off to the public.

On Saturday, protesters gathered outside CNN headquarters in Atlanta, where some people shattered windows and tagged profanities on the building with spray paint.

Florida Republican Senator Marco Rubio tweeted on Saturday his belief that far-left elements such as Antifa and far-right militants who have recently adopted the name "Boogaloo" are "taking advantage of the protests" in American cities to encourage and commite violence.

"Many of these professional agitators don’t fit a simple left vs right identity. They are part of a growing anti-government extremist movement. They hate law enforcement & want to tear the whole system down even if it requires a new civil war," Mr Rubio wrote on Twitter.

Read more

Trump lauds National Guard for repelling 'Antifa led anarchists'

Trump criticised by Democratic mayors over Floyd protests

Trump to postpone G7 meeting a day after Angela Merkel snubbed invite

Trump threatens White House protesters with 'vicious dogs' and weapons

Trump says ‘MAGA loves the black people’ after protest threats