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LA starts night curfew, Marines deployed to join National Guard

LA starts night curfew, Marines deployed to join National Guard

The Mainichia day ago

LOS ANGELES/WASHINGTON (Kyodo) -- A night curfew began Tuesday in Los Angeles as protests against U.S. President Donald Trump's immigration policies turned sporadically violent, with hundreds of Marines reportedly deployed to augment thousands of National Guard troops -- despite opposition from local leaders to the federal response.
Los Angeles Mayor Karen Bass declared a 10-hour curfew from 8 p.m. covering 2.5 square kilometers in the central area after some protesters engaged in looting and vandalism.
The protests erupted after Immigration and Customs Enforcement agents conducted raids on Friday and have escalated since Sunday, when some 300 National Guard members were deployed under Trump's presidential directive authorizing the dispatch of at least 2,000 federal troops to address the lawlessness.
Criticizing Democratic local leaders' handling of the crisis, the Republican president sent the 700 Marines to join a total of 4,000 National Guard members despite no request for federal assistance from Bass and California Gov. Gavin Newsom.
Meanwhile, Newsom has filed an emergency motion in federal court seeking to suspend National Guard operations in the state, vowing to block Trump's "unlawful militarization of Los Angeles." Protests have spread across the nation, with over 1,000 people rallying in New York on Tuesday.
Japan's government has called on its nationals in Los Angeles to exercise caution, given that the city and its surrounding area is home to the largest number of Japanese nationals overseas, totaling around 64,000 as of October 2024.

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