Security fears hit Biden inauguration
US Acting Homeland Security Secretary Chad Wolf announced his resignation unexpectedly Monday as worries rose over more violence during President-elect Joe Biden's inauguration next week.
Wolf's departure as head of the body in charge of security for the January 20 event came five days after President Donald Trump's supporters stormed the US Capitol, hoping to prevent Biden from replacing him.
The Homeland Security Department oversees several law enforcement bodies including the Secret Service, the point agency for security for the White House and the US president.
Wolf, who said he was stepping down for procedural reasons, named Pete Gaynor, the administrator of the Federal Emergency Management Agency, to replace him.
But the move did not end questions over whether the US capital city would be adequately secure over the coming week.
An internal FBI document warned of the possibility that armed Trump supporters could hold protests in all 50 states between the coming weekend and January 20, according to US media.
The White House issued a statement saying that Trump had "declared that an emergency exists in the District of Columbia and ordered Federal assistance to supplement the District's response efforts due to the emergency conditions resulting from the 59th Presidential Inauguration from January 11 to January 24, 2021."
It said the order gave the Department of Homeland Security the authority to act "to save lives and to protect property and public health and safety, and to lessen or avert the threat of a catastrophe in the District of Columbia."
MORE TROOPS CALLED UP
The Pentagon said Monday it had authorised 15,000 National Guard troops to be deployed for Biden's inauguration.
Already 6,200 troops are on the ground in Washington, and a total of 10,000 are planned by the coming weekend, said General Daniel Hokanson, chief of the Defense Department's National Guard Bureau.
Another 5,000 could be deployed by the day of the inauguration, he said.
They will come equipped with riot gear and weapons, but so far they have not been authorised to arm themselves while on the streets of the US capital, he said.
Before he announced his departure, Wolf also ordered an acceleration of preparations by the Secret Service, citing "events of the past week and the evolving security landscape."
Preparations for the event were moving quickly. A security fence has been built around the entire grounds of the Capitol, where Biden will take the oath of office as Trump's successor, reports AFP.
'DON'T COME'
Still angry about last Wednesday's violence, in which five people died, including a protester shot dead by police and a police officer who was attacked and died from his injuries, Washington mayor Muriel Bowser appealed to Biden backers to stay away from the capital on inauguration day.
Normally, hundreds of thousands of Americans -- sometimes more than a million -- flock to Washington for the quadrennial event.
"We are asking Americans not to come to Washington DC for the 59th presidential inauguration on January 20 and to instead participate virtually," Bowser said.
Organisers said the Democratic president-elect would use the occasion to foster national unity, faced by a country deeply divided over politics and hobbled by the coronavirus pandemic.
He will be sworn in at the Capitol in front of the National Mall filled with flags rather than the usual hundreds of thousands of spectators.
Afterwards, he and three former US presidents -- Trump won't attend -- will travel to Arlington National Cemetery, where thousands of US military war dead for veterans are buried, to lay a wreath.
But the preparations come as Democrats, accusing Trump of fomenting and applauding what they branded an "insurrection" and "coup" attempt last week, seek to force Trump from office prematurely.
That could further spark violence by Trump supporters, the FBI warned in a new internal advisory.
According to ABC News, the document says that far-right groups like the violent Boogaloo Boys are planning protests around the country timed to the inauguration.
Meanwhile, the US Supreme Court on Monday steered clear of more cases involving bids by Trump and some Republican allies to overturn his election loss and turned away a Democratic effort to expand mail-in voting in Texas, reports Reuters.
The justices, as expected, declined to expedite consideration of eight Trump-related cases including three filed by his campaign challenging the election results in Wisconsin and Pennsylvania, two of the states he lost to Democratic President-elect Joe Biden.
It already was clear that the court had no intention to intervene because it had not acted before Congress last week certified Biden's victory in the November 3 election.
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