Fifteen arrests were made at Thursday's protests against planned demolitions of public housing in New Orleans, police have told the Associated Press.
Police used stun guns and pepper spray during the protests, which took place outside a meeting where the City Council voted in favour of the plan.
Nine people were injured, four of whom were taken to hospital, police said.
Critics say replacing the storm-damaged structures with mixed income housing will mean fewer cheap homes.
Police said the 15 arrests were made on charges ranging from battery to disorderly conduct, AP reported.
On Thursday, following hours of debate and clashes outside the meeting, the City Council voted in favour of the US Department of Housing and Urban Development's plan to replace the decades-old structures damaged by Hurricane Katrina.
One of the campaign leaders, Endesha Juakali, said the protesters would fight on and planned "an all out effort" to prevent bulldozers from carrying out the demolition order.
Partially-demolished housing block in New Orleans (15 December 2007)
Tensions have been high in New Orleans over a lack of housing
Before the meeting, critics of the plan had argued that the plan would further restrict the stock of cheap housing at a time when the city is still struggling to rebuild from Katrina.
They also said the brick buildings were still sound and only needed to be renovated.
"It is beyond callous, and can only be seen as malicious discrimination," said Kali Akuno of the Coalition to Stop the Demolition.
"It is an unabashed attempt to eliminate the black population of New Orleans."
But supporters of the demolition plan argued it would allow developers to take advantage of tax breaks and build new neighbourhoods with an allotment of low-income housing.
Thousands of families from the southern states hit by Hurricane Katrina are still living in government-funded temporary housing, including caravan parks.
On the one hand, the protesters have a point. The feds have fucked over New Orleans from the start and the hit deserve a good deal of restitution for it. On the other hand, getting violent over it is a sure way to not only solve nothing, but also make things much worse and make yourselves look really bad in the prosess.
Gaian Paradigm: Because not all fantasy has to be childish crap. Ephemeral Pie: Because not all role-playing has to be shallow. My art: Because not all DA users are talentless emo twits. "Phant, quit abusing the He-Wench before he turns you into a caged bitch at a Ren Fair and lets the tourists toss half munched turkey legs at your backside." -Mr. Coffee
The porblem, which none of the anti-Demolition people want to acknowledge, is that eveyr one of these projects should have been torn down for rebuilding before katrina. The damage afterwards from the storm just made it more imperative. Calling the building dilapidated is an insult to tenaments elsewhere so all things aside the Feds may have fucked them over but you can either keep getting fucked over or maybe just maybe get housing that isn't killing more people than it is keeping alive. Really they have nothing to lose considering the state of the housing projects.
SDNet World Nation: Wilkonia
Armourer of the WARWOLVES
ASVS Vet's Association (Class of 2000)
Former C.S. Strowbridge Gold Ego Award Winner MEMBER of the Anti-PETA Anti-Facist LEAGUE
"I put no stock in religion. By the word religion I have seen the lunacy of fanatics of every denomination be called the will of god. I have seen too much religion in the eyes of too many murderers. Holiness is in right action, and courage on behalf of those who cannot defend themselves, and goodness. "
-Kingdom of Heaven
CmdrWilkens wrote:The porblem, which none of the anti-Demolition people want to acknowledge, is that eveyr one of these projects should have been torn down for rebuilding before katrina. The damage afterwards from the storm just made it more imperative. Calling the building dilapidated is an insult to tenaments elsewhere so all things aside the Feds may have fucked them over but you can either keep getting fucked over or maybe just maybe get housing that isn't killing more people than it is keeping alive. Really they have nothing to lose considering the state of the housing projects.
At least two of those projects had in fact been closed down a year or two before the storm and plans for their demolition drafted but the city had not gotten around to the actual removal before Katrina hit. Desire and Fischer had gone to the wreckers' ball several years before that, while the St. Thomas project in the Irish Channel neighbourhood had been the one razed to make way for a new Wal-Mart and redevelopment.
When ballots have fairly and constitutionally decided, there can be no successful appeal back to bullets.
—Abraham Lincoln
People pray so that God won't crush them like bugs.
—Dr. Gregory House
Oil an emergency?! It's about time, Brigadier, that the leaders of this planet of yours realised that to remain dependent upon a mineral slime simply doesn't make sense.
—The Doctor "Terror Of The Zygons" (1975)