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Charleston shooting church to reopen with thousands gathering for service at Emanuel African Methodist Episcopal | Charleston shooting church to reopen with thousands gathering for service at Emanuel African Methodist Episcopal |
(about 3 hours later) | |
Thousands of people are expected to pour into the centre of Charleston on Sunday morning as the historic black church where nine people were killed is set to re-open for a religious service. | |
It will be the first service in the Emanuel African Methodist Episcopal Church since nine people were shot dead during a Bible study session last week. | |
"There are going to be a lot of people here," said a police officer on duty outside the Emanuel African Methodist Episcopal church on Saturday evening. "You’d better get here early." | |
Church member Cassie Watson said the church would open at 8.30am for Sunday school and 9am for a service. | |
Ms Watson was one of more than a dozen people to enter the building after a cleaning crew had worked on it, the Associated Press said. Other congregation members also confirmed the church would open Sunday. | Ms Watson was one of more than a dozen people to enter the building after a cleaning crew had worked on it, the Associated Press said. Other congregation members also confirmed the church would open Sunday. |
The announcement came as Charleston police said the church was no longer a "crime scene" and was being handed back to the church community. | |
The church is expecting a large turnout when it reopens on Sunday (Getty) Churchgoer Harold Washington, 75, said he expected the church to host even more newcomers. | |
"We're gonna have people come by that we've never seen before and will probably never see again, and that's OK," he said. "It's a church of the Lord, you don't turn nobody down." | |
Shae Edros, 29, speaking after a multiracial group of women sang 'Amazing Grace' outside the church on Saturday afternoon, said: "I think just because of what people have gone through emotions are definitely heightened, not just in Charleston but with anyone going to church because it is such a sacred place, it is such a safe place." | |
Several events are planned throughout the city to show solidarity with the congregation. | |
Bells at more than a dozen churches throughout Charleston and elsewhere are expected to ring at 10am local time. | |
People are also planning to join hands and form a peace chain along a bridge connecting Charleston to one of its suburbs. | |
Authorities say the shooting at the church, which occurred on Wednesday night, was carried out by 21-year-old Dylann Roof. | |
Hundreds rallied in support of the nine people shot dead at Emanuel African Methodist Church (Getty) In a photograph taken prior to the shooting Roof was pictured holding a Confederate flag, as well as displaying the flags of defeated white-supremacist governments in Africa. | |
Long a divisive symbol in the US, the Confederate flag was originally flown by the pro-slavery South during the 1861-65 American Civil War. | |
On Saturday a crowd rallied outside the South Carolina statehouse calling for the removal of the flag from the statehouse grounds. | |
The flag at the statehouse is controversial. An agreement among legislators in 2000 saw it moved from the Statehouse dome to a monument directly in front and it can only be lowered with approval of the full legislature. | |
As a consequence, when Nikki Haley, the South Carolina governor, ordered the state and US flags at the Statehouse to lowered to half-mast for nine days to honour the dead, the Confederate flag stayed raised. | |
Two prominent Republicans have joined the call for the flag to be removed. | |
Doug Brannon, a Republican state senator, said he would now introduce a bill to remove the flag entirely calling it "not just a symbol of hate ... [but] a symbol of pride in one's hatred". | |
Mitt Romney, the former Massachusetts governor and 2012 presidential contender, expressed a similar view on Twitter. | |
Take down the #ConfederateFlag at the SC Capitol. To many, it is a symbol of racial hatred. Remove it now to honor #Charleston victims. | |
(Additional reporting by agencies) |