A falling Confederate monument in Portsmouth hit a protester in the head. Photo / Twitter
A falling Confederate monument in Portsmouth hit a protester in the head. Photo / Twitter
WARNING: Graphic
A protester has reportedly been seriously injured while pulling down a Confederate statue in Portsmouth, Virginia.
"There was a gentleman who was directly in front of the statue and when the statue finally did give way it came and fully hit him in the head," a local BlackLives Matter representative told news reporter Brett Hall.
"You could see his skull was actually showing, he was convulsing on the ground. He lost a fair amount of blood, we're asking everybody to pray for that man right now."
Hall, who was at the protest, reported it had been a celebratory atmosphere as protesters worked to pull the statues down from the monument using chains and a tow rope as well as a sledgehammer.
The Norfolk city mayor Kenny Alexander confirmed a person was seriously injured in an attempt to remove the statue.
He said anyone who attempted to scale another monument at Commercial Place, across the river from the Portsmouth monument, would be removed in the interests of their own safety.
The monument, which is 24m high, needs to be removed with a crane.
The council has voted to schedule a public hearing on its removal next month, intending to remove it by August 7.
Elsewhere in Virginia, protesters have toppled the statue of Confederate President Jefferson Davis along Richmond's famed Monument Avenue.