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After Baton Rouge police killings, Obama urges Americans to tamp down inflammatory rhetoric

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US President Barack Obama makes a statement at the White House in Washington about police officers deadly shooting in Baton Rouge on Sunday. Photo: AFP
Associated Press

Confronting another killing of police officers, President Barack Obama on Sunday urged Americans to tamp down inflammatory words and actions as a violent summer collides with the nation’s heated presidential campaign.

Obama said the motive behind Sunday’s killing of three officers in Baton Rouge, Louisiana, was still unknown. It was the latest in a string of deadly incidents involving law enforcement, including the police shooting of a black man in Baton Rouge and the killing of five officers in Dallas.

“We as a nation have to be loud and clear that nothing justifies attacks on law enforcement,” Obama said in remarks from the White House briefing room.

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The gunman has since been identified as Gavin Eugene Long, an African-American US Marine veteran, whose social media accounts are filled with references to police killings of black people.

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The president spoke on the eve of the Republican Party’s national convention, where Donald Trump will officially accept the GOP nomination. The businessman has cast the recent incidents as a sign that the country needs new leadership, often using heated rhetoric to make his point.

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