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Barricades in Portland's Autonomous Zone Dismantled After Mayor Strikes Deal With Protestors

© AFP 2023 / Nathan HowardProtesters plan their next action while standing around a fire near the Red House on Mississippi Street on December 9, 2020 in Portland, Oregon
Protesters plan their next action while standing around a fire near the Red House on Mississippi Street on December 9, 2020 in Portland, Oregon - Sputnik International
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The so-called “autonomous zone” was established on Tuesday although protests have been held at the site for the past three months, as demonstrators have been protesting urban gentrification by barricading streets with metal, wood and wire fencing and setting booby traps for police.

A booby-trapped “autonomous zone” in Oregon has been dismantled, after Portland Mayor Ted Wheeler struck a deal with protesters at the site.

The deal will allow the Kinneys, a black family whose eviction initially led to the protests, to remain where they are.

Wheeler’s office confirmed that a deal had been struck, although it was not clear if the house was being sold back to the Kinneys, the family that was evicted after defaulting on a mortgage.

Protesters tweeted their jubilation at the news.

Wheeler also wrote to the Kinney family to apologize for an earlier tweet in which he authorized police to use all lawful means to end what he describes as an illegal occupation, according to the Oregonian.

“Nobody should be subjected to this kind of stress and harm, and we apologize for the role our tweets played in this,” added Wheeler.

Activist Mac Smiff told the Oregonian that the so-called Red House deal was a clear “win” following violent protests late last week involving activists after police tried to dismantle barricades in the autonomous zone.

The current owner has offered to sell the house, in which the Kinney family has lived for the past six decades, back to the Kinneys for the $260,000 he paid for it in a foreclosure sale, plus the $20,000 he says it has cost him since then, according to Oregon Live.

So far, over $309,000 has been raised for the family, according to the New York Post.

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