A US
police chief resigned Friday amid an uproar over the death of an
unarmed Australian woman who had called to report a possible sexual
assault and was shot by a responding officer.
Minneapolis police chief Janee Harteau
had faced criticism over her handling of the killing of Justine
Damond last Saturday night, which ignited an international outcry.
She did not appear before TV cameras
until Thursday, saying she had been on vacation at a remote mountain
location.
The Midwestern city's mayor Betsy
Hodges said she asked for the chief's resignation Friday and Harteau
tendered it.
"I've lost confidence in the
chief's ability to lead us further. And from the many conversations
I've had with people around our city, especially this week, it is
clear that she has lost the confidence of the people of Minneapolis
as well," Hodges said in a statement.
In announcing her resignation, Harteau
said she wanted to "let a fresh set of leadership eyes see what
more can be done" to improve the police department.
Moments later the mayor announced her
nomination of Assistant Police Chief Medaria Arradondo as Harteau's
replacement. Arradondo has been the public face of the department
during the crisis. If the moves were meant to quell uproar in the
city, they did not appear to work.
In an evening news conference the mayor
held to speak further about the changes, an angry group of protesters
interrupted the mayor within minutes of her taking the podium.
"We're not buying this,"
exclaimed one protester from the podium after the mayor left, having
been shouted down by the crowd. "This is just a cosmetic change
and we want institutional change."
The protesters were particularly angry
about the lack of body camera footage of the shooting, and complained
of a lack of police accountability.
"We don't want you as the mayor of
Minneapolis anymore," another protester said. "You're
ineffective as a leader."
There were street protests for a second
day in a row on Friday, this time in downtown Minneapolis, following
a march Thursday night on the streets of Damond's neighbourhood to
the south of downtown.
Damond, a 40-year-old meditation
teacher and life coach, called police Saturday night after hearing
noises she feared might have been those of someone getting raped.
Responding officer Matthew Harrity had
been startled by a loud noise just before Damond approached the
police car he was driving, prompting his partner Mohamed Noor to fire
the fatal shot, authorities said.
The state's Bureau of Criminal Affairs
(BCA), the agency investigating the shooting, said Friday that Noor
continued to refuse an interview with authorities. But investigators
located and interviewed a witness they had been seeking, the BCA
said.
The witness had been bicycling near the
scene of the shooting and had stopped to watch officers provide first
aid. The BCA did not disclose what the witness told investigators.
*AFP, CHICAGO, United States
No comments:
Post a Comment