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Police video shows US officers fatally beating black man
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US Civil Rights groups are in uproar after a police video showed a black
man being clubbed to death by police in an incident recalling the infamous
televised beating of Rodney King in 1991.
"An investigation has been launched in Cincinnati after a police video
revealed officers beating a black man with steel clubs. The 25-stone man
died shortly afterwards in hospital," reports the Independent.
"Six officers attempted to arrest Nathaniel Jones after a disturbance at a
fast-food restaurant in the Ohio city known for racial tensions," continues
The Independent's Andrew Buncombe. "The video camera, fitted in a police
vehicle, showed Mr Jones, 41, being repeatedly struck by officers using
their night-sticks."
Preliminary autopsy results showed that Mr. Jones "had an enlarged heart
and that his blood contained cocaine and PCP, or "angel dust," both of
which can cause bizarre or aggressive behaviour," notes the New York Times.
Despite this "activists said Mr Jones' death was another example of police
brutality and racism in Cincinnati," says the Independent.
Cincinnati was the scene of rioting in 2001 after a white policeman shot
dead an unarmed black man.
This time the authorities have acted swiftly to defuse tensions.
"The officers who were at the scene, five whites and one black, were placed
on administrative leave, which is standard procedure," reports to the New
York Times.
"By Monday morning, city employees trained to defuse confrontation were
walking the streets of black neighbourhoods, knocking on door after door to
talk ? and to listen," reports the LA Times. "When the new City Council was
sworn in Monday afternoon, one of its first orders of business was a moment
of silence for Jones and his family."
The strategy seemed to be keeping the peace, despite simmering anger among
African Americans who are unwilling to forget the memory of the 17 African
American suspects killed by Cincinnati police officers from 1995 to 2001.
However civil rights groups were not easily appeased and the Rev. Jesse
Jackson issued a statement on Monday saying he wanted state and federal
authorities to investigate.
Non-Turkish Crimes Against Humanity