Nationwide protests, walkouts planned over fatal ICE shootings in Minneapolis
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Protesters said they want to step up pressure even after Mr Trump said he would “de-escalate a little bit” in Minnesota.
PHOTO: REUTERS
MINNEAPOLIS – Student organisers have called for walkouts and protests across the United States on Jan 30 to demand that federal immigration agents withdraw from Minnesota, after two fatal shootings of US citizens generated public outrage.
The call for a general strike follows protests on Jan 23 when thousands marched through Minneapolis in the bitter cold,
Protesters said they want to step up pressure even after Mr Trump said he would “de-escalate a little bit” in Minnesota.
“We want this to be more of a sustained movement, so going forward: more striking, more protesting,” Ms Brianna Jackson, part of the Black Student Union at the University of Minnesota, said in a video promoting the strike.
On Jan 29, US border czar Tom Homan, newly installed as leader of Mr Trump’s immigration enforcement surge in Minneapolis, said federal officers would focus on targeted operations, shifting away from the broad street sweeps.
Newly issued internal guidance from a high-ranking official of the US Immigration and Customs Enforcement (ICE) agency directs federal officers to refrain from unnecessary communication and engagement with “agitators” to avoid “inflaming the situation”.
“No work. No school. No shopping. Stop funding ICE,” ran a slogan on the website nationalshutdown.org that listed 250 sites for the Jan 30 protests across 46 states and in major cities such as New York, Los Angeles, Chicago and Washington.
Voters ousted the Democrats from the White House and returned Mr Trump to power in 2024 partly out of frustration with a surge in illegal immigration to the United States.
But after weeks of videos showing aggressive tactics by heavily armed and masked officers in Minneapolis, American approval of Mr Trump's immigration policy has fallen to its lowest in his second term, a recent Reuters/Ipsos poll showed.
A majority of respondents said his crackdown had gone too far.
A day after the protests on Jan 23, immigration officers shot and killed Mr Alex Pretti, 37, an intensive care nurse at a hospital for military veterans.
Many people were already upset at the shooting death of Ms Renee Good, 37, a mother of three, in her car on Jan 7.
Ms Good and Mr Pretti had been monitoring immigration officers, as part of a movement that enabled witnesses to capture both shootings on cellphone video.
At a memorial at the site where Mr Pretti was killed, a woman laid a bouquet of flowers and quietly wept on Jan 29, saying she felt moved to protest in his memory.
“I’m absolutely not spending any money tomorrow,” said Ms Stacy, who asked that her last name not be used. “It’s my little way of being a voice for those who don’t have them, like Alex.”
In the southern state of Georgia, students at 90 high schools from Atlanta to Savannah plan to walk out of class on Jan 30.
“We are saying no business as usual while ICE is allowed to terrorize our communities,” said Ms Claudia Andrade, an immigrant rights organiser with Atlanta’s Party for Socialism and Liberation.
On the eve of the protests, police in Washington, DC arrested 54 demonstrators of different religious affiliations who sat on the floor at the Hart Senate Office Building, holding banners that read: “Do Justice, Love kindness, Abolish ICE.”
They were demanding that the US Senate withhold funding to the Department of Homeland Security, which oversees ICE. REUTERS


