Oregon eviction protest fueled by history of gentrification
PORTLAND, Ore. — Protesters barricaded streets in a Portland, Oregon, neighbourhood and set booby traps for police after officers arrested about a dozen people in a clash over gentrification and the eviction of a Black and Indigenous family from a home.
Several city blocks were still closed off Wednesday by blockades fabricated with wood, metal and wire fencing. Protesters dressed in black and wearing ski masks stood watch from atop a nearby wall.
The street behind the blockade in the neighbourhood of homes, coffee shops and restaurants was laced with booby traps aimed at keeping officers out — including homemade spike strips, piles of rocks and thick bands of plastic wrap stretched at neck-height across the roadway.
It recalled more than four months of clashes between police and protesters decrying racial injustice and police brutality that only abated weeks ago, and Mayor Ted Wheeler — whose handling of the unrest almost cost him reelection — said the city would not tolerate an “autonomous zone.” The earlier protests angered President Donald Trump, who sent U.S. agents to protect a federal courthouse targeted by demonstrators.