Monday, May 31 marks 100 years since a white mob's deadly attacks on African Americans in the neighborhood of Greenwood in Tulsa, Oklahoma. Thousands were left homeless and up to 300 Black people were killed reut.rs/2Tmhfkp 1/8
No one was ever charged for the violence.
Despite the city's obstructive zoning laws and insurance companies refusing to cover the damage, the Greenwood residents managed to rebuild their neighborhood.
According to a Human Rights Watch report, thousands of survivors were also sent to internment camps. Now, African Americans are calling for justice and reparations at the federal and local level 3/8
Viola Fletcher, one of three centenarian survivors of the attack, testified in the U.S. Congress earlier this month.
‘I am 107 years old and I have never seen justice. I pray that one day I will,’ Fletcher said reut.rs/2RLQXb6 4/8
In 2001, Oklahoma state called for direct repayments to survivors of the massacre and their descendants, creating a scholarship fund, and establishing an enterprise zone in historic Greenwood.
None of the recommendations were implemented reut.rs/2RLQXb6 5/8
But change could be on the horizon. Lawmakers in Washington introduced a bill calling for a study of slavery and discrimination in the United States. In February, survivors and descendants filed the latest of three lawsuits seeking reparations, including a compensation fund 6/8
In May, another bill was introduced to allow victims to file court claims without contending with limitations. Reparations for the survivors remains a thorny question, says Michelle Place, executive director of the Tulsa Historical Society and Museum reut.rs/2RLQXb6 7/8
Learn more about the 1921 Tulsa race massacre, 100 years later reut.rs/2Ra9XzC 8/8
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From Delhi to the western state of Gujarat and the southern tech city of Bengaluru, India has been overwhelmed by a surge in deaths after it was swept by a second wave of coronavirus infections. Cases early this month topped more than 400,000 a day reut.rs/3fXJUnM 1/6
With overburdened hospitals and scant supplies of oxygen and drugs for an already creaky healthcare system, the numbers of cremations and burials reported by several major cities are far larger than official death tolls, @Reuters finds 2/6
In Surat, Gujarat, a city of six million people and is best known for its diamond-polishing industry, at least seven crematoriums and graveyards saw a more than threefold rise in the number of cremations and burials in April versus a year ago 3/6
Bettye and Robert Freeman were in their Boston living room when they heard chanting outside. As they opened the front door, they saw the protesters.
It was June 4, 2020, 10 days after the murder of George Floyd at the hands of Minneapolis police reut.rs/3oJ1Vdo 1/6
.@brian_photog’s image shows two faces flooded with pain, pride, sadness and strength.
‘It was a passing of the torch,’ Bettye, a retired lawyer whose father was the first Black mayor of Montclair, New Jersey, told @Reuters in the run-up to the anniversary of Floyd’s death 2/6
Two days after the Freemans raised their fists, 16-year-old Bethel Boateng was in Denver yelling, ‘I can’t breathe!’ into a bullhorn.
‘In that moment, on that day, I felt like I was on top of the world,’ Boateng said 3/6
Ryanair Flight 4978 had already begun its descent into the Lithuanian capital when the pilot announced that the plane would be suddenly diverting to Minsk, capital of neighboring Belarus.
But one of the passengers, Belarusian dissident journalist Roman Protasevich, reacted immediately, standing up from his seat, reaching into the overhead locker, pulling a laptop computer from his hand luggage and passing it to a woman along with his mobile phone 2/5
Protasevich, who is wanted in Belarus for his role in broadcasting huge opposition protests in Minsk last year, did not have much time. Minsk is less than 125 miles from Vilnius. The diversion would take minutes 3/5
🔉 Jerusalem bureau chief @farrellreporter, Gaza-based senior correspondent @nidalal, Jerusalem-based senior correspondent @DanWilliams and Middle East editor @samianakhoul break down the situation.
Do we have any idea of Hamas’ military capability going forward?
.@DanWilliams explains what Israel’s Iron Dome is and how it works
After 11 days of violence, we have a ceasefire. @Nidalal explains how we got here:
The Tokyo 2020 Olympics are only two months away but residents are deeply divided on whether they should go ahead amid a fourth COVID wave and a renewed state of emergency restrictions.
We asked locals in Tokyo what they think. Here's what they said reut.rs/3oyZqKA 👇1/6
For sushi chef Takashi Yonehana, Japan's international reputation is at stake.
'If Japan becomes the first country to cancel the Olympics due to a pandemic, nobody will say it but everyone will think it ... it will damage our image,' he said 2/6
But retiree Mirei Sakai is adamant the Games should be called off.
'The pandemic is a terrible situation all over the world right now. In the middle of this, you'd invite foreigners over here ... I feel sorry for the athletes but it's unavoidable,' she said 3/6
Hamas official confirms a 'mutual and simultaneous' truce with Israel will begin on Friday at 2 a.m.
Israeli cabinet confirms Gaza truce decision but says the hour has yet to be agreed to
Israel's security cabinet said it had voted unanimously in favor of a 'mutual and unconditional' Gaza truce proposed by mediator Egypt, bringing a potentially tenuous halt to the fiercest fighting in decades reut.rs/3hHzPhe