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Posted: 2017-08-13T01:39:33Z | Updated: 2017-08-13T01:39:33Z Lexington Mayor Announces Plans To Relocate Confederate Statues Amid Charlottesville Violence | HuffPost

Lexington Mayor Announces Plans To Relocate Confederate Statues Amid Charlottesville Violence

"The tragic events in Charlottesville today have accelerated the announcement I intended to make next week."

The mayor of Lexington, Kentucky, announced plans Saturday to relocate his city’s Confederate statues, following violent white supremacist protests  in Charlottesville, Virginia.

Jim Gray, a Democrat, tweeted as groups clashed in Virginia:

“The tragic events in Charlottesville today have accelerated the announcement I intended to make next week,” Gray said in a statement. “On Tuesday I will ask the Council to support Lexington’s petition to the Kentucky Military Heritage Commission, a required next step. Details to come.”

The protests in Charlottesville stemmed from an event initially touted as a rally in support of a statue of Gen. Robert E. Lee , which is slated for removal . Another protest against the statue’s removal took place in May of this year. 

Charlotteville’s decision to remove the Lee statue is part of a nationwide effort to remove Confederate monuments from public property.

HuffPost’s Christopher Mathias and Andy Campbell reported in July :

In the two years since white supremacist and Confederate flag admirer Dylann Roof massacred nine black parishioners at a South Carolina church, the movement to remove Confederate symbols from public property has gained renewed purpose and momentum. So far, 60 Confederate symbols have been removed from city- and state-owned land across the U.S., according to the Southern Poverty Law Center. Most recently, the city of New Orleans toppled four statues honoring the Confederacy.

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