Anti-refugee protests in Tennessee staged by White nationalists.
About 300 white nationalists and neo-Nazis held back-to-back rallies in
two small Tennessee cities on Saturday to protest refugee resettlement
in the state, which sued the federal government over the issue earlier
this year.
Saturday’s
rallies were organized by the Nationalist Front coalition, which
embraces groups considered neo-Nazi or neo-Confederate by the Southern
Poverty Law Center, which tracks hate groups.
One
man was arrested for disorderly conduct, but there were no injuries,
local media said. The reports could not be immediately confirmed.
Local officials
and faith leaders had denounced the gatherings, fearing they could
inflame racial, ethnic and religious animosities in the state.
President
Donald Trump has sought to ban travel from six Muslim-majority
countries since he took office and called during his 2016 election
campaign for a “total and complete shutdown of Muslims entering the
United States.”
The “White Lives Matter” rallies in Shelbyville and
Murfreesboro, organized by some of the same groups involved in a
Virginia march that turned violent in August, drew an equal number of
counter-demonstrators and a heavy police presence.
The protesters started in Shelbyville, then traveled about 35 miles
north to Murfreesboro for a second rally. Both towns are near Nashville,
center of a metropolitan area has become home to refugees from Somalia,
Iraq and elsewhere.
“We don’t want the federal
government to keep dumping all these refugees into middle Tennessee,”
said Brad Griffin, a member of a group known as the League of the South
who has written about his desire to create a white “ethnostate.”
To help keep the peace, Shelbyville police used
temporary fencing to separate the white nationalists from
counter-demonstrators. Anyone seeking to enter the area was searched.
Guns, backpacks, sticks and other items that might double as weapons
were banned.
The white nationalist
demonstrators gathered behind a half dozen white shields emblazoned with
red crosses. Counter-protesters carried signs with slogans including
“Don’t Hate” and “Veterans for Peace.” Two lines of police, some in
riot gear, stood between the two sides, who shouted at each other.
Later in Murfreesboro, where protesters were
prohibited from carrying shields, or wearing masks or helmets, the rally
remained peaceful, the city said on Twitter.
Over the last 15 years, about 18,000 refugees have
been resettled in Tennessee, less than 1 percent of the state’s
population, according to the Tennessean newspaper.
The
state filed a lawsuit the federal government in March saying it had
been unduly forced to pay for refugee resettlements. It was the first
state to bring such a case on the basis of the 10th Amendment, which
limits U.S. government powers to those provided by the Constitution.
Other states have filed similar suits on different legal grounds.
“When
they say refugees, what they really mean is Muslims,” said Ibrahim
Hooper, a spokesman for the Council on American-Islamic Relations,
referring to Saturday’s protesters.
He noted that a Murfreesboro mosque has been a source of controversy and vandalism for years.
“Tennessee
is one of the states that has seen a rise in anti-Muslim bigotry in
recent years, particularly since the election,” Hooper said.