Like forty other cities across the United States, New York has implemented a curfew to try to calm the riots triggered by the death of an American black, George Floyd, during an arrest in the Minnesota May 25.

Central Manhattan was the scene of looting on Monday evening, prompting the mayor of New York to announce a longer curfew as early as Tuesday. Brand stores, such as Nike or Michael Kors on 5th Avenue, or electronics, cellphones or Lego stores of other major avenues in Midtown were looted in the early evening, before the entry into force of '' a new curfew from 11 p.m. local time.

Groups of young people, often around ten people, circulated from one street to another, while entire streets of this district, which was normally very touristy but deserted with the pandemic, were blocked by the police. Images from local NY1 television included looters running from a Best Buy chain electronics store before being apprehended by police. 

Mayor Bill de Blasio deemed the situation "not acceptable". He said the curfew would start "earlier" Tuesday at 8 p.m. when it was first imposed on Monday from 11 p.m. to 5 a.m. "The city is completely under control, and for the most part calm and peaceful," nonetheless assured the mayor on the NY1 channel. The imposition of a curfew had been announced a few hours earlier by the mayor and the governor Andrew Cuomo, after demonstrations and looting during the weekend, notably in the trendy district of SoHo. 

Demonstrations in around 40 cities

The American economic capital followed in the footsteps of some 40 other American cities, which imposed curfews in an attempt to calm the riots which engulfed the country, after the death of an unarmed black man, George Floyd, Monday in Minnesota, a new symbol of police brutality against the black minority. As in previous days, the protests started calmly on Monday afternoon, with more than a thousand gathered in Times Square, and about as many in Brooklyn. But things degenerated in the evening.

Donald Trump talks about the deployment of the army

As New York faced new looting, President Donald Trump announced from Washington the deployment of "thousands of heavily armed soldiers" and police to Washington to end "the riots" and "the looting". The mayor De Blasio, a democrat, denounced "the bellicose terms" and the "polarizing rhetoric" of the Republican president, who is playing for his re-election in November. "But it was not his statements in the last few hours that caused all this, it is what he has done in recent years that has contributed to it," he said.

He's using the American military against the American people.

He tear-gassed peaceful protesters and fired rubber bullets.

For a photo.

For our children, for the very soul of our country, we must defeat him. But I mean it when I say this: we can only do it together. https://t.co/G1yE67q9Nz

- Joe Biden (@JoeBiden) June 2, 2020

For his part, the Democratic candidate for the White House Joe Biden accused Donald Trump of using the army "against the Americans" and tear gas against "peaceful demonstrators" for a communication operation. "He is using the US military against the Americans. He is sending tear gas against peaceful protesters and shooting rubber bullets. For a photo," the former US vice-president tweeted after Donald Trump's surprise visit in a iconic church near the White House.