Confederate flag reappearance sparks protests in S.C.

COLUMBIA, South Carolina -- Several hundred people who started their day protesting the reappearance of the Confederate flag outside the South Carolina Statehouse were keeping up their protests into the night Sunday.

Earlier Sunday, the Confederate battle flag flew again outside the South Carolina Statehouse -- temporarily -- during a rally that drew both supporters in Civil War garb and bullhorn-toting protesters.

Groups for and against the flag were kept separate by metal barriers on the front lawn, and police officers supported by helicopters circling overhead kept the peace as the flag flew again for several hours.

But the scene was tense at times after police killings of black men in Louisiana and Minnesota and the killings of officers by a black sniper in Dallas.

A year ago Sunday, after a white man killed nine black people inside a Charleston church, the Confederate flag that had flown for years beside the Confederate Soldiers Monument was furled and sent to a museum.

The monument remains, but the 30-foot pole the flag flew on was dismantled. So on Sunday, re-enactors hosted a battle flag on a portable pole in the same spot as about 200 people watched.

The rally was organized by the South Carolina Secessionist Party, and supporters held their own flags. Some dressed as a Confederate Memorial Honor Guard. They saluted as the flag rose up the pole, and the crowd applauded and cheered, with some shouting "Leave it there!"

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Some also joined in a sing-along of "Dixie."

But dozens of protesters also showed up, including a man who shouted through a bullhorn: "That flag is hate! That's why it was taken down in the first place."

The protest continued throughout the day.

The crowd, also protesting police violence, was blocking a major intersection in downtown Columbia a block from the Statehouse complex.

Police were out in force and a helicopter was monitoring the situation from overhead.

The SCDOT posted online that the roadway is closed in both directions near Elmwood Avenue. A detour is set up at Greystone Boulevard, CBS affiliate WLTX reported.

Columbia police had been working with the protesters to keep things safe.

Meanwhile, across the U.S., other mahor cities are holding protests against police violence.

Read more here.

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