Four stabbed and one shot after pro-Trump rallies
Four people were stabbed and one shot as rallies
backing President Donald Trump's baseless claims of election fraud led to
clashes in major US cities on Saturday.
Scuffles broke out in many places between
rally-goers and counter-protesters who turned up to criticize the president,
who lost the November 3 election to Democrat Joe Biden but is yet to concede.
Washington State Police said in a tweet late
Saturday that a shooting had taken place after clashes near the capitol
building in Olympia, and that a suspect had been detained.
In the US capital, DC Fire and EMS Department
communications chief Doug Buchanan told AFP that four people had been stabbed
and were now hospitalized "with serious injuries." The New York Times
reported that 23 had been arrested throughout the day.
There was no indication of whether any of the
victims had been involved in the protests, on either side of the divide.
The day had begun with a festive atmosphere as
thousands of red-hatted protesters filled Washington's streets to support the
president, undeterred by the US Supreme Court's rejection on Friday of what may
have been his last chance to overturn the results.
Similar events took place in Olympia, Atlanta and
St. Paul, Minnesota, as well as in smaller towns in Nebraska, Alabama and
elsewhere.
Demonstrators at the DC rally -- noticeably smaller
than a similar protest last month -- told AFP they were steadfast in their
support for the embattled president.
"We're not gonna give up," said Luke
Wilson, a sixty-something protester who had come all the way from the western
state of Idaho.
"I believe there is a big injustice being done
to the American people," added Dell Quick, a regular at Trump's political
rallies, as he brandished a flag defending gun rights.
Protesters offered no shortage of explanations for
the poll results, even though they have been affirmed by state election
officials -- several of them Republican -- and by judges in several key states.
Every state has now certified the results, giving
Biden 306 votes in the Electoral College to Trump's 232. Electors are to
formally cast their votes Monday.
But protesters insisted, as Trump has repeatedly, that
there was widespread fraud in the election.
Some pointed to "foreign interference,"
others to software that allegedly erased millions of votes for the president --
but not those for other Republican candidates on the same ballots.
Quick told AFP that "there's no way
possible" that Biden won.
Susan Bowman, a 62-year-old from Hampton, Virginia,
said "this is not a banana republic. We need to fix the election."
Those who addressed the crowd included Michael
Flynn, Trump's former national security adviser who was recently pardoned by
the president after admitting that he lied to the FBI over alleged Russian
interference in the 2016 election.
Dozens of court cases alleging fraud or contesting
the result have been decided -- virtually all in Biden's favor, with some
judges offering stinging criticism of the lack of evidence.
But that was not enough for 47-year-old Darlene
Denton, who wore a "Trump 2024" badge on her sweatshirt.
"Nobody wants to hear evidence, nobody wants to
hear cases, everything just gets thrown out," said Denton, who had come
from Tennessee to support a president she said had given "a voice to the
people."
Trump, in stark defiance of the clear result and of
US tradition, has refused to concede to Biden.
"Wow! Thousands of people forming in Washington
(D.C.) for Stop the Steal," he tweeted early Saturday. "Didn't know
about this, but I'll be seeing them!"
Not long afterward, his helicopter lifted off from
the White House grounds and passed over the crowd -- many singing the US
national anthem -- as Trump headed to New York to attend the annual Army-Navy
football game.
Among the protesters, members of the far-right
militia group the Proud Boys were clearly visible -- in their signature
black-and-yellow outfits, some wearing bulletproof vests -- and they often drew
cheers from others in the crowd.
Some blocks away, supporters of the Black Lives
Matter movement held their own, much smaller, rally, chanting "Nazis
out!"
Police, some in riot gear, used their bodies and
bicycles to keep the groups apart. There was also at least one clash between
police and counter-protesters.



