COLUMBIA, South Carolina— A sea of Confederate flags held by screaming Klu Klux Klan members fluttered in front of the South Carolina Statehouse Saturday, just as a counter rally featuring African flags on the other side of the Capitol wrapped up.
The Loyal White Knights of the Klu Klux Klan, based in North Carolina, vowed to protest the removal of the Confederate flag from the Statehouse last week — and made good on that promise.
About 50 members descended on the Capitol steps waving the rebel banners — at least one of which included a Nazi symbol — and immediately began shouting racial slurs at attendees of an earlier “Countering the Attack on Black Unity Rally.” Those protesters were moved to behind barricades, a distance away from the Statehouse steps, where they yelled back at the pro-Confederate flag group.
Within about an hour, everyone was ushered away from the Capitol by dozens of law enforcement officers, many outfitted in bullet-proof vests, helmets and camoflauge. At least one physical scuffle broke out, and some people who got a hold of a Confederate flag tore it into several pieces.
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The earlier rally, including members of Black Lawyers for Justice and Black Educators for Justice, a Florida organization with links to the New Black Panther Party, began with about 200 people gathered around a podium and responding to passionate speakers shouting, “Black power!”
Justice Coats said she came to communicate a message about the Confederate flag. “Equality is more important than a symbol of hate,” she said.
But Stan Stones, a Baptist minister, said he came to defend the flag but made clear that he does not support the KKK or their beliefs. The KKK “hijacked it in the mid-1950s, and they made it a symbol of hate. And Southern heritage has nothing to do with hate — it has to do with honoring those who fought,” he said.
A spotlight was cast on South Carolina after nine parishioners of a historic black church in Charleston were gunned down last month by a man espousing white supremacist ideologies. The gunman, 21-year-old Dylann Roof, had also taken photos posing with the Confederate flag.
A debate raged over whether to take down the rebel banner from the Statehouse in response to the massacre, and lawmakers finally had it removed on July 10.
Many in South Carolina had urged residents to stay away from the conflicting demonstrations in Columbia that are drawing scores of protesters from out of state — from Georgia to New York.
RELATED: Trial date set in Charleston church shootings case
Gov. Nikki Haley asked in a statement Friday night for people to avoid the Capitol on Saturday.








