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The Guardian - US
The Guardian - US
World
Adam Gabbatt (now), Amanda Holpuch and Tom McCarthy (earlier)

Biden addresses Atlanta attacks: ‘words have consequences’ whatever the motivation - as it happened

Ashley Zhang takes a moment before laying flowers at a makeshift memorial outside Youngs Asian Massage in Acworth, Georgia.
Ashley Zhang takes a moment before laying flowers at a makeshift memorial outside Youngs Asian Massage in Acworth, Georgia. Photograph: Bita Honarvar/Reuters

That concluded our coverage for today. Here’s a summary of the day’s events:

  • Joe Biden and Kamala Harris condemned the Atlanta attacks in remarks on Friday evening. They also condemned a rise in anti-Asian violence over the past year, with Biden saying “our silence is complicity”. Harris said that “Asian Americans have been attacked and scapegoated” over the past year.
  • More details of the victims’ lives have emerged today. The son of Hyun Jung Grant said his mother: “was one of my best friends and the strongest influence on who we are today” in a post on the GoFundMe website.
  • Police in cities across the country increased foot patrols in Asian neighborhoods amid fears of anti-Asian violence after the shooting.
  • Joe Biden and Kamala Harris met earlier with Asian American community leaders. Biden is also calling for new hate crimes legislation to protect Asian Americans and others targeted by a “rise of hate crimes exacerbated during the pandemic.”

Updated

Biden, who has known his fair share of loss, offered a heartfelt tribute to the families of the Atlanta shooting as he concluded his speech.

“I know they feel like there’s a black hole in their chest [...] and that things will never get better,” Biden said.

“Our prayers are with you, and I assure you, the one you lost will always be with you. And the day will come when their memory brings a smile to your lips before it brings a tear to your eye, as unbelievable as that is now.

“It will take a while, but I promise you it will come. When it does, that’s the day you know you’re going to make it.”

Joe Biden speaks at Emory University in Atlanta, Georgia.
Joe Biden speaks at Emory University in Atlanta, Georgia. Photograph: Eric Baradat/AFP/Getty Images

Updated

Biden – 'words have consequences'

Joe Biden has addressed the shootings in Atlanta, saying that “words have consequences” as he detailed the violence Asian Americans have faced over the past year.

“Whatever the motivation [for the shootings] we know this: too many Asian Americans have been walking up and down the streets and worrying. Waking up each morning the past year feeling their safety and the safety of their loved ones are stake. They’ve been attacked, blamed, scapegoated and harassed,” Biden said.

“It’s been a year of living in fear for their lives just to walk down their street. Grandparents afraid to leave their homes. Small businesses attacked.”

Donald Trump and other Republican politicians repeatedly dubbed Covid-19 the “China virus”, and Biden said that language had contributed to a dramatic spike in anti-Asian violence over the past year.

“We’re learning again we’ve always known, words have consequences. It’s the coronavirus, full stop,” Biden said.

“Hate and violence often hide in plain sight,” Biden said, yet that hate and violence is “often met with silence”.

That has to change, Biden said, because “our silence is complicity”.

Updated

Kamala Harris has said the Atlanta shootings were a “heinous act of violence” in a speech in the city, and hinted at the impact of Donald Trump’s racist language.

“We were reminded yet again that the crises we face are many, that the foes we face are many,” Harris said.

“Whatever the killer’s motive these facts are clear,” Harris said: six out the eight people killed were of Asian descent, seven were women, and “the shootings took place in businesses owned by Asian Americans”.

Violence against Asian Americans has risen dramatically over past year, Harris said.

“Racism is real in America and it has always been,” and so has xenophoba and sexism, Harris said.

Over the past year, “Asian Americans have been attacked and scapegoated”, Harris said.

“We’ve had people in positions of incredible power scapegoating Asian Americans. People with the biggest pulpits spreading this kind of hate.”

Updated

We’re waiting to hear from Joe Biden and Kamala Harris, who are scheduled to speak any time now at Emory university, in Atlanta.

CNN has a full list of the people Joe Biden and Kamala Harris are meeting with in Atlanta to discuss Asian American violence.

Among the state leaders and community leaders are Atlanta Mayor Keisha Lance Bottoms; Georgia state senator Dr Michelle Au; Georgia state senator Sheikh Rahman; Georgia state representative Marvin Lim; Georgia state representative Bee Nguyen and Georgia state representative Sam Park.

The president and vice-president are also meeting Stephanie Cho, executive director of the Asian Americans Advancing Justice-Atlanta and Victoria Huynh, vice president of the Center for Pan Asian Community Services.

Biden is expected to give an address at Emory university later today.

Updated

Joe Biden and Kamala Harris are set to meet Asian American Georgia state legislators and other community leaders in Atlanta at 3.35pm.

The president and vice-president are said to discuss the racist rhetoric and actions against Asian Americans and Pacific Islanders, which have proliferated during the pandemic, after Covid-19 first emerged in China.

Biden and Harris had already been scheduled to visit Atlanta, as part of a tour designed to laud the recently passed $1.9tn Covid-19 relief bill, but the focus of the visit was changed in the wake of the shootings.

The Fulton County medical examiner’s office has updated the list of victims in the shootings who were named today. The eight who were killed on Tuesday:

Soon Chung Park, age 74

Hyun Jung Grant, age 51

Suncha Kim, age 69

Yong Yue, age 63

Delaina Ashley Yaun, age 33

Paul Andre Michels, age 54

Xiaojie Tan, age 49

Daoyou Feng, age 44

Hyun Jung Grant’s son, Randy Park, wrote that his mother: “was one of my best friends and the strongest influence on who we are today.”

Delaina Ashley Yaun’s friend, Rose Luce, told the Guardian: “I’ve never seen such love in a family the way I see the love Delaina had for hers.”

Paul Andre Michels’ brother, Paul, told the Guardian: “He was just a regular guy, very good-hearted, very soft-natured.”

Xiaojie Tan’s daughter, Jami Webb, told USA Today: “She did everything for me and for the family. She provided everything. She worked every day, 12 hours a day, so that me and our family would have a better life.”

Updated

Reporting for the Guardian from Atlanta, Mike Jordan spoke to people at Martin Luther King Jr National Historical Park about the shootings this week.

Kyra Kimber, a Black woman, said she wasn’t aware Joe Biden and Kamala Harris were visiting the city that day, but said she was happy they were visiting at this time.

“Being here in this place reminds me to remember Martin Luther King’s legacy and what he stood for,” Kimber said. “Also being here makes me think not only about what happened the other night, but to remember we are the next generation. We are the future. We need to take action and we need to take charge of our community.”

Kelly Beck, a white woman, said: “I feel both moved by the promise that Martin Luther King’s message held for us all, and also a little disheartened that 50 to 60 years later, not only are we feeling the repercussions of a society built on systemic injustice, but now I think, especially in these particular murders, that it is the intersection of race and gender,”

“So it’s white supremacy and the patriarchy that’s so deeply embedded in the culture and system that is America.” Beck said. “One man’s voice really isn’t enough. It was a shining beacon, but the work is collective work, and it hasn’t gone away.”

The suspected gunman in Tuesday’s shootings was an active member at Crabapple First Baptist Church, in Milton, Georgia, which has released a statement about the killings. “The shootings were a total repudiation of our faith and practice, and such actions are completely unacceptable and contrary to the gospel,” the church said.

The congregation held a members-only meeting on Wednesday night and took down its social media profiles after the shootings. The church said it had cooperated with law enforcement in the statement and said it blamed the suspect entirely for the shootings.

“No blame can be placed upon the victims,” the church said. “He alone is responsible for his evil actions and desires.”

The statement concluded: “we deeply regret the fear and pain Asian-Americans” were experiencing because of the shootings.

Raymond Chang, a Korean American who is head of the Asian American Christian Collaborative, told the Washington Post earlier this week that he was disappointed but not surprised to learn that the suspected gunman was a Southern Baptist Convention (SBC) member.

“One of the things that is difficult about white evangelical Christian churches and spaces is that they struggle to talk about race and racism in any meaningful way and create conditions in which racism and white supremacy can sadly flourish,” said Chang.

He said the SBC “need to wrestle with whether they had a part systemically in the long chain of discipleship in producing someone that could do something like this”.

Updated

Afternoon summary

  • More details of the victims’ lives have emerged today. The son of Hyun Jung Grant said his mother: “was one of my best friends and the strongest influence on who we are today” in a post on the GoFundMe website.
  • Family and friends of Xiaojie Tan told USA Today that she was: “a curious, hard-working and caring woman who was always filled with joy.”
  • Joe Biden and Kamala Harris are in Georgia and scheduled to meet with Asian American community leaders later this afternoon. The president and vice-president had previously scheduled a trip to the city on Friday to meet with officials at the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention.
  • Biden also released a statement today expressing “grief and outrage” at the Atlanta attacks and calling for new hate crimes legislation to protect Asian Americans and others targeted by a “rise of hate crimes exacerbated during the pandemic.”
Flowers, candles and signs are arranged in a memorial outside Young’s Asian Massage
Flowers, candles and signs are arranged in a memorial outside Young’s Asian Massage Photograph: Robin Rayne/ZUMA Wire/REX/Shutterstock

Randy Park, the son of victim Hyun Jung Grant, created a GoFundMe to raise money for him and his brother, who he said are the only members of his family who live in the US.

On the fundraising website, he said that he was dealing with arranging the funeral, figuring out the brothers’ living situation and trying to pay for expenses like bills and food.

Park wrote of his mother:

She was one of my best friends and the strongest influence on who we are today. Losing her has put a new lens on my eyes on the amount of hate that exists in our world. As much as I want to grieve and process the reality that she is gone, I have a younger brother to take care of and matters to resolve as a result of this tragedy.Frankly, I have no time to grieve for long.

As of Friday afternoon, more than $878,000 had been raised. In an update, Park wrote:

Thank you everyone and please share whatever care and kindness you have shown here to anyone you know that feels scared or unsure about the world we live in. I can’t help but feel selfish for all the attention this has garnered. Thank you everyone so much. This doesn’t represent even a fragment of how I feel. My mother can rest easy knowing I have the support of the world with me

We removed an earlier post listing the names of the shooting victims. The police department which provided the names made an error by abbreviating some of the names. The journalist @sarahjeong identified the error.

Expressing 'grief and outrage', Biden calls for new pandemic-related hate crimes law

Joe Biden has released a statement expressing “grief and outrage” at the Atlanta attacks and calling for new hate crimes legislation to protect Asian Americans and others targeted by a “rise of hate crimes exacerbated during the pandemic.”

The statement reads in part:

While we do not yet know motive, as I said last week, we condemn in the strongest possible terms the ongoing crisis of gender-based and anti-Asian violence that has long plagued our nation. I urge Congress to swiftly pass the COVID-19 Hate Crimes Act, which would expedite the federal government’s response to the rise of hate crimes exacerbated during the pandemic, support state and local governments to improve hate crime reporting, and ensure that hate crimes information is more accessible to Asian American communities.

Local Oconee Radio Group news anchor Rahul Bali reports the names of some Asian-American legislators who are scheduled to meet with Biden and Harris this afternoon:

Joe Biden walks to the Marine One helicopter en route to Atlanta.
Joe Biden walks to the Marine One helicopter en route to Atlanta. Photograph: Andrew Harnik/AP

‘We need to cry out’: Atlanta’s Asian American community reacts to shootings

Mike Jordan writes for the Guardian:

Woojin Kang, a young man of Korean descent, stood on the sidewalk in front of Gold Spa in northeast Atlanta on Thursday afternoon, wearing a black Adidas windbreaker, black shorts and black Nike sneakers, holding a neon yellow sign that read “Asian women’s bodies have been slayed” above the hashtag “#StopAsianHate”.

The heavy rains of an eastbound southern storm front had subsided, and the skies had some clouds but otherwise were bright blue on Piedmont Avenue.

Flowers, candles and signs are displayed at a makeshift memorial on Friday, March 19, 2021, in Atlanta.
Flowers, candles and signs are displayed at a makeshift memorial on Friday, March 19, 2021, in Atlanta. Photograph: Candice Choi/AP

While the weather had improved considerably in the area since the evening of 16 March, when multiple people were killed inside Gold Spa and Aromatherapy Spa directly across from each other, Kang’s sentiment was far from sunny.

“I live 1.9 miles away from here,” Kang said. “It hits close to home. Our culture, being Korean, we are all about our elders. We’re all about respecting our elders and our women. And when you see this kind of stuff that’s been building up, and right here this happens, it’s a tipping point.”

Read the full piece here:

Atlanta spa shootings spark new push for gun controls

Prominent gun control groups angered by the ease with which the alleged Atlanta spa shooter was able to acquire his weapon are calling on politicians to convert their outrage at the massacre into a renewed push for legislative reforms.

The Brady Campaign to Prevent Gun Violence and the Giffords Law Center, the advocacy group named for the former congresswoman and gun violence survivor Gabrielle Giffords, say the deaths of eight people, including six Asian American women, merely hastens the need for action in Washington DC and at state level.

Big Woods Goods Gun Range and shop, where the suspect is believed to have purchased a handgun.
Big Woods Goods Gun Range and shop, where the suspect is believed to have purchased a handgun. Photograph: Robin Rayne/ZUMA Wire/REX/Shutterstock

The alleged murderer, Robert Aaron Long, purchased a 9mm handgun on Tuesday morning, just hours before Tuesday’s deadly rampage through three Atlanta area spas. According to law enforcement sources, and the gun shop owner, the transaction breached no federal gun laws or procedures.

“Hate exists everywhere in the world and America’s unfettered access to weapons makes that hate lethal. It is tragic that it took the highly public murder of eight people to prompt that conversation, again,” Brady’s president, Kris Brown, told the Guardian.

Read the full piece:

A study found that racist anti-Asian hashtags spiked after Trump first tweeted “Chinese virus,” the Washington Post has reported.

via the Washington Post:

As the coronavirus spread across the globe last February, the World Health Organization urged people to avoid terms like the “Wuhan virus” or the “Chinese virus,” fearing it could spike a backlash against Asians.

President Donald Trump didn’t take the advice. On March 16, 2020, he first tweeted the phrase “Chinese virus.”

That single tweet, researchers later found, fueled exactly the kind of backlash the WHO had feared: It was followed by an avalanche of tweets using the hashtag #chinesevirus, among other anti-Asian phrases.

Read the full piece here.

‘Our community is bleeding’: Asian American lawmakers say violence has reached ‘crisis point’

Asian American lawmakers and leaders warned that violence and discrimination targeting their community have reached a “crisis point” following the shootings in Atlanta this week that killed eight people, including six women of Asian descent.

The hearing, the first to examine anti-Asian discrimination in more than three decades, had been scheduled weeks ago amid a surge in violence against the Asian community since the pandemic began. But it took on heightened urgency after the mass shooting that left Asian Americans in Atlanta and across the country shaken and afraid.

“What we know is that this day was coming,” Judy Chu, chair of the Congressional Asian Pacific American Caucus, told a subcommittee of the House judiciary committee on Thursday. “The Asian American community has reached a crisis point that cannot be ignored.”

Read the full piece:

Police patrols have increased in Asian areas. Not everyone is feeling safer

Police in cities across the country increased foot patrols in Asian neighborhoods following the shootings at three Asian-owned spas in the Atlanta area.

From San Francisco to New York, Chicago to Philadelphia, police departments this week directed officers to step up their presence amid fears of anti-Asian violence after a shooter killed eight people, six of them Asian women, on Tuesday night.

“We are continuing to monitor the events around the tragic shooting of Asian Americans in Atlanta,” the Philadelphia police department tweeted. “While there is currently no known connection to our area, out of an abundance of caution, we have bolstered patrols around Asian communities and businesses.”

In the San Francisco Bay Area, the increased police presence provided welcome relief for some, members of the Asian community said on Thursday, some noting they had been reporting an increase in targeted crime for months.

Read the full piece:

Hello and welcome to our running coverage of a mass killing on Tuesday in three Atlanta-area massage parlors that left eight dead, including six women of Asian descent.

Joe Biden and Kamala Harris are to meet with Asian American leaders in Atlanta today. The president and vice-president had previously scheduled a trip to the city on Friday to meet with officials at the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention.

Biden’s visit is expected to spotlight the question of how the United States will respond to an increase in violent incidents against Asian Americans in the last year, with at least 3,800 incidents reported and many more thought to have gone unreported.

At a House hearing on Thursday, lawmakers connected discriminatory attacks on Asian Americans with racist messaging surrounding the coronavirus pandemic, as peddled by Donald Trump, prominent Republican senators and others.

But leaders of the Asian American and Pacific Islander communities warn that hostility toward vulnerable groups predates the pandemic and the problem will not recede on its own just because the health crisis might.

Thank you for joining us today.

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