Thousands are expected to gather in Washington DC to commemorate the 1963 civil rights March on Washington and in protest of police violence.
The families of black Americans shot or killed by police will speak at the same site where Martin Luther King Jr delivered his I Have a Dream speech.
Friday’s event is called the Commitment March: Get Your Knee Off Our Necks, a reference to George Floyd’s death.
The relatives of Mr Blake, Mr Floyd, Breonna Taylor and Eric Garner are expected to deliver speeches at the march.
They will be joined by civil rights leader Reverend Al Sharpton and Martin Luther King III – the eldest son of Mr King Jr.
The event comes in the wake of at times violent protests over Mr Blake’s shooting that have left two dead in Kenosha, Wisconsin. Mr Blake was shot and injured by police last Sunday.
Since Mr Floyd’s death in May, marches in support of the Black Lives Matter movement and against racism and police brutality have swept the US and the globe.
Protesters continue to seek justice for Mr Floyd, who died after being held down by police officers, one of whom had his knee on Mr Floyd’s neck, and Breonna Taylor, who was shot and killed in her home when officers raided her apartment.
Rev Sharpton announced the march – which falls on the 57th anniversary of the 1963 event – at Mr Floyd’s memorial service in June.
Planners said the event will bring together generations for a day of action to advocate for police reform as well as to urge Americans to vote in the upcoming presidential election.
« I’m here to play my role and give this administration the mandate that we mean what we say: we want change, » he says.
« We’re in a crisis and we really have got to get things in order, » he says. « We can’t be living like this and we can’t be seeing my people die on film every week. That’s not normal. »
« Clearly with the way that the police have been behaving in different areas of the country, they’re looking at us as targets and we can’t have that, » he continued. « It contradicts the entire American dream. »
Bryant wants lawmakers and law enforcement held accountable for the deaths of black people in police custody.
Given Covid-19 concerns, people have been encouraged to participate virtually if they cannot attend or in local marches taking place in other states. In Washington, there will be temperature checks and mandatory masks along with social distancing.
In addition, buses from states considered to be virus hotspots will no longer be coming to the capital.
Also on Friday, activists at the Black National Convention – organised by the Movement for Black Lives – will adopt a policy platform.
Among the initiatives on the agenda are slavery reparations, defunding police departments and investment in healthcare, housing and social services in black communities, organisers said. It was drafted by hundreds of delegates from across the country.
SOURCE: https://www.w24news.com
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