US media has published videos showing the last minutes and moments in the life of a black American young man, Richard Brooks, who died of police gunfire, after a white police officer shot him in Atlanta on Friday.

The clips, some of which spread on social media and published more widely by CNN, show how the confrontation between Brooks and two policemen evolved after a call from a fast food restaurant manager complained that a man stopped his car in the corridor leading to the restaurant and then fell asleep, and the car remained parked in Queue for receiving applications.

According to the videos, the friendly confrontation started in its beginning, according to the camera installed in the clothes of the officer and another surveillance camera, as the young man accepted a drug and alcohol test and talked about his daughter's birthday.

But a video by a passer-by showed Brooks resistance to an officer who tried to arrest him and another on-site officer before he could break them off and run in the parking lot with what appeared to be a stun gun that he extracted from one of them.

Plenty of questions over the death of Rayshard Brooks remain unanswered.

Several videos - filmed by surveillance cameras, police body cameras, dashboard cameras and bystanders - shed light on the 27-year-old's last moments. https://t.co/snuAGrP3OC

- CNN International (@cnni) June 15, 2020

Other footage filmed by the restaurant's cameras showed Brooks turning around as he ran and apparently directed the pistol toward the two officers chasing him before one of them shot him from his pistol to drop the young man to the ground.

In his report, the Georgia State Bureau of Investigation said that Brooks was taken to a hospital and underwent surgery, but died soon after, adding that a policeman was also wounded.

ABC News reported that policeman Garrett Rolf, who had struck Brooks, was relieved of his duties, while another policeman was suspended.

The coroner's report
In the same vein, an investigator in the office of the forensic doctor in Fulton County in the US state of Georgia said in a statement that Brooks' 27-year-old autopsy showed that he had died after losing a quantity of blood and organ wounds as a result of two bullets.

Protests and violence
Parallel to that, protests and violence continued in Atlanta, and protesters demanded a review of laws on police methods, during cases of detention.

New York City also witnessed continuous marches and protests to demand justice for George Floyd and implement radical reforms in the police, to end what protesters describe as racial discrimination against blacks and minorities.

The protests were organized in the five New York neighborhoods, including two marches in front of the city's Trump Tower and Columbus Square, whose protesters are calling for a name change, as protesters consider Columbus to be slavery and persecution against Aborigines, and raise doubts about what historians say is the first discoverer of the American continent.

President Donald Trump, through his Twitter account, described the mayor of Seattle and the governor of Washington state as weak and incompetent in the face of what he called the far left.

Trump has accused the "fake" media of avoiding allocating any space to the subject of the extreme left's takeover of Seattle.

Human Rights Council examines police brutality
On the other hand, the United Nations Human Rights Council said in a statement on Monday that it will hold emergency discussions on Wednesday dealing with accusations of "systematic racism, police brutality and the use of violence with peaceful protesters" in the United States.

The council added that its decision was taken after a request made by Burkina Faso last week on behalf of African countries.

The United States is not a member of the 47-nation council, which is based in Geneva, as it withdrew from it two years ago on the pretext of siding against Israel.

Unfortunately, the letter sent by Burkina Faso stated that "the death of George Floyd was not a separate incident."

The letter also said that the "global outrage" sparked by this incident confirms the importance of the Human Rights Council discussing this issue, noting that 600 activists and relatives of the victims called last week for a special session.