Dutch police fired warning shots and water cannon in efforts to quell hundreds of protesters, arresting 34, during a third successive day of unrest on Thursday triggered by the death of a Caribbean man in police custody.
Police fire warning shots during unrest over arrest death
The death from apparent asphyxiation on Sunday of Mitch Henriquez, 42, from the Dutch Caribbean island of Aruba, has been likened to incidents in the United States that sparked protests over excessive police use of force.
Recommended articles
The death from apparent asphyxiation on Sunday of Mitch Henriquez, 42, from the Dutch Caribbean island of Aruba, has been likened to incidents in the United States that sparked protests over excessive police use of force.
Disturbances erupted anew overnight on Thursday and police on horseback charged protesters who set fires, hurled bottles and rocks and smashed shop windows, according to a police statement.
At one point during several hours of rioting, it said, police fired warning shots to ward a mob of youths who had cornered them, before riot police arrived in jeeps, enabling their colleagues on foot to flee to safety.
Police said calm was restored in the mainly immigrant neighbourhood, known for tense relations with the predominantly white police department, by 4 a.m. (0200 GMT).
Preliminary findings from an autopsy indicated that Henriquez died of asphyxiation after being held in a chokehold and pinned down by five white police officers. His death was almost certainly caused by rough police treatment, it said.
Henriquez, who has three children and was visiting the Netherlands, was arrested at a concert on Saturday for allegedly shouting that he had a gun, and died in hospital on Sunday. He did not have a weapon, investigators said. [ID: L5N0ZF4X4]
Police initially said that Henriquez had become unwell while on his way to jail. But amateur video emerged on Monday showing him being taken away in an arrest van, apparently already unconscious, after the heavy-handed arrest.
The five officers involved in Henriquez's arrest have been suspended pending results of an investigation.
The Hague's police force has previously been criticized by Amnesty International and in a 2013 Dutch TV documentary for targeting foreigners and immigrants disproportionately and with greater use of force.
Police have denied having any policy of racial profiling.
JOIN OUR PULSE COMMUNITY!
Eyewitness? Submit your stories now via social or:
Email: eyewitness@pulse.ng