The mayor of Ferguson, Missouri, now admits that, yes, there is a racial divide in the St. Louis suburb — an admission that comes more than three months after violence erupted following the shooting death of African-American teenager Michael Brown by a white police officer.
“There’s not a racial divide in the City of Ferguson,” Mayor James Knowles told msnbc’s Tamron Hall during an interview with “NewsNation” in August, adding that is a “perspective of all residents in our city.” But on Monday, Knowles told Al Jazeera he regretted his previous comments.
VIDEO: Ferguson mayor: There’s no racial divide here
In Ferguson, about two-thirds of the residents are black, and the police force is reportedly about 93% white. But some local officials, including Knowles, continued to deny in the months following Brown’s death that a racial divide existed in the town.
Knowles has now changed his public stance. “There’s clearly racial divides all across the country. But I didn’t see the divide in our community so much as race, but a lot of it is socioeconomic,” he said. “It does disproportionately affect African-Americans. So among that, yes, absolutely. There’s a racial divide there.”
Knowles said he didn’t previously witness “this kind of outcry.”
“My point was we don’t see that play out in Ferguson. We do not see white residents and African-American residents looking at each other with a cautious eye or scared of each other on a daily basis,” he added.
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