Burning riots in Minneapolis


The burning of Minneapolis’s Third Precinct on Thursday evening marked the culmination of a simmering anger ignited the previous Monday by the filmed agony of George Floyd, an African American whose last breath, suffocated under the knee of a white police officer for several long minutes, became a symbol of structural state violence.

This uprising, far from being an isolated incident, is part of a geography of pain all too familiar to the city’s residents, marked by the unpunished deaths of Jamar Clark in 2015 and Philando Castile in 2016, and illustrates how marginalized and over-policed ​​populations They transform into radical political actors when the avenues of institutional justice seem blocked.

Faced with the lack of immediate charges against the four officers involved, and in a context of precariousness exacerbated by segregation and the Covid-19 pandemic, frustration spilled over from peaceful demonstrations into an urban revolt marked by stone-throwing, looting, and fires targeting stores like Target and AutoZone, forcing the deployment of the National Guard and the use of tear gas.

This explosion of collective violence, which quickly spread to Memphis, Los Angeles, Chicago, and New York, echoes the major uprisings of 1968 following the assassination of Martin Luther King Jr., reminding us that for more than 50 years, brutal contact between the police and segregated Black communities has acted as a recurring trigger for rebellions against socioeconomic exclusion and the criminalization of poverty.

With the historical perspective we have today in 2026, these events of May 2020 are no longer analyzed simply as riots, but as the turning point of a global movement that led to the historic conviction of the officers involved, including Derek Chauvin, and imposed a worldwide reassessment of systemic racism, proving that the flames of Minneapolis ultimately illuminated, beyond the destruction, the inalienable demand for true equality before the law.





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