-Daniel aka Obsidian
Confederate flag, despite massacre, still flies high
Charleston (United States) (AFP) -
Flags were flying at half-staff Thursday in South Carolina after the
cold-blooded killing of nine black people in an historic African-American
church in Charleston -- with one notable exception.
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Outside the legislature in the state
capital Columbia, the racially divisive Confederate battle flag still flies
high, renewing debate over its symbolism more than 150 years after the Civil
War defeat of the slave-holding rebel South.
Dylann Roof, the 21-year-old white
male suspected of carrying out the Emanuel African Episcopal Methodist Church
bloodbath, was one of many southern Americans who identified with the 13-star
saltire in red, white and blue.
In a photo posted on Twitter by a
South Carolina television journalist Thursday, Roof is seen astride a 1990s
Hyundai sedan that bears a "Confederate States of America" ceremonial
bumper tag that prominently features the flag. Roof was apprehended Thursday in
North Carolina in the same vehicle and returned to Charleston to face charges.
By coincidence, the US Supreme Court
on Thursday ruled 5-4 that Texas did not violate the Constitution's free-speech
provision when it denied a request from the 30,000-member Sons of Confederate
Veterans group for a state-approved Confederate flag license plate.
The South Carolina and American
flags fly at half mast as the Confederate flag unfurls below at the State
Capital. "This is a sad day for the
First Amendment and for mutual respect and bridge-building among Americans of
different viewpoints," the organization said in a statement.
Others focused outrage on the South
Carolina state house, where the Confederate flag remained at full height even
as the US and South Carolina flags were lowered in mourning. "Moral cowardice requires
choice and action," wrote Ta-Nehisi Coates, an African-American national
correspondent for The Atlantic magazine, blogged on Thursday. "Take down
the flag. Take it down now."
Alas, that's easier said than done.
By law, state officials say, only the entire South Carolina legislature can
decide if and when the flag can be lowered.
Barbara Owens casts a shadow on a
memorial message board outside the Emanuel African Methodist Episcopal Church. One of the victims of Wednesday's
attack on the Emanuel church's evening Bible class was its senior pastor
Clementa Pinckney, 41, a state senator since 2000 and a lower-house member
before that. Supporters of the Confederate flag
consider it a valued token of enduring Southern pride and heritage, while
critics see it as a symbol of racism and white supremacy.
- 'Regardless of race' -
"The Confederate Battle Flag
represents all Southern, and even Northern, Confederates regardless of race or
religion and is the symbol of less government, less taxes and the right of the
people to govern themselves," says Dixie Outfitters, a Virginia-based
retailer of Confederate-themed merchandise.
A nationwide poll by the Pew
Research Center in 2011 indicated that nine percent of Americans felt positive
upon seeing the Confederate flag, against 30 percent who said they reacted
negatively and 58 percent who felt neither way.
But among blacks, 41 percent told
Pew said they reacted negatively to the sight of the flag -- such is its power
to invoke the memory of antebellum slavery and the decades of harsh racial
segregation that followed the Civil War.
Sentiments are even stronger in
South Carolina, where the opening shots of the Civil War were fired in April
1861 at Fort Sumter in Charleston harbor. (The city itself was the American
capital of the transatlantic slave trade, with 40 percent of enslaved Africans
passing through it.)
In a 2014 poll for the State
newspaper in Columbia, three out of four white South Carolina residents said
the Confederate flag should keep flying outside the state house -- compared to
61 percent of blacks who wanted to see it go.
- Banned in California -
In California, since January this
year, the Confederate flag cannot be displayed by state authorities, under a
law initiated by a black state legislator whose mother once came across the
banner for sale in a state house gift shop.
Mississippi, on the other hand,
remains the only state that features the Confederate saltire on its official
state flag, where it appears in the canton. An attempt to change it was soundly
defeated in a 2001 referendum.
The Anti-Defamation League, best
known for tackling anti-Semitism, says the Confederate flag is popular among
white supremacists in both the United States and abroad. But it adds on its website:
"Because of the continued use of the flag by non-extremists, one should
not automatically assume that display of the flag is racist or white supremacist
in nature. The symbol should only be judged in context."
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