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US Minneapolis shooting continues to fuel debate

Updated: 2026-01-20 09:50
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A protester holds an anti-ICE sign outside the Bishop Henry Whipple Federal Building in Minneapolis, Minnesota, on Sunday. JIM VONDRUSKA VIA AFP

WASHINGTON — The fatal shooting of a woman by a United States Immigration and Customs Enforcement agent in Minneapolis has continued to stoke tensions locally and nationwide, as state and federal officials sharply clash over how the incident unfolded and should be handled.

Protests showed signs of escalation following another ICE agent shooting a Venezuelan immigrant in the leg in the same area a week later. Mayor Jacob Frey recently said the situation in the city was "not sustainable".

The incident has become a battleground of competing narratives, with partisan leaders using it to intensify political conflict. Observers believe that tensions between federal and local governments could deepen, and confrontations between the public and law enforcement may further escalate.

On Jan 7 in Minneapolis, 37-year-old US citizen Renee Good was shot and killed by an ICE agent during a federal enforcement operation, sparking controversy nationwide.

The shooting has generated markedly divergent accounts of what happened, amplified by partisan conflict and ideological division.

Secretary of Homeland Security Kristi Noem, President Donald Trump and Vice-President JD Vance defended the ICE agent, claiming Good attempted to run over officers in "an act of domestic terrorism".

Frey, meanwhile, argued that video footage indicates that Good did not pose a threat and that the agent acted recklessly.

The Trump administration recently announced it is sending 2,000 immigration agents to the Minneapolis area amid allegations of welfare fraud involving immigrants in Minnesota. The number of newly dispatched ICE and Border Patrol agents has since increased to nearly 3,000.

Frey and Minnesota Governor Tim Walz have demanded that ICE leave the city and state immediately, arguing that its presence is causing chaos.

In addition, the Pentagon has ordered about 1,500 active-duty soldiers based in Alaska who specialize in operating in arctic conditions to be ready in case of a possible deployment to Minnesota, two defense officials said on Sunday on condition of anonymity, The Associated Press reported.

One official said the troops are standing by to deploy to the state should Trump invoke the Insurrection Act. The rarely used 19th-century law would allow the president to send military troops into Minnesota, where protesters have been confronting federal immigration agents for weeks.

"It's ridiculous, but we will not be intimidated by the actions of this federal government," Frey told CNN on Sunday.

"It is not fair, it's not just, and it's completely unconstitutional."

Darrell West, a senior fellow at Brookings Institution in Washington, told Xinhua News Agency: "The graphic video of the shooting has galvanized protesters across America who feel it is a gross injustice and want an independent investigation. The ICE agents seem less well-trained than police officers and don't have the same ability to de-escalate personal confrontations."

He added that "many worry that the same thing could happen elsewhere".

Gregory Cusack, a former member of the Iowa House of Representatives, said, "This is the predictable outcome of the militarization of police forces, the hiring of masked thugs armed to the teeth, and the ugly branding of anyone who disagrees with this administration as 'the enemy'."

Christopher Galdieri, a political science professor at Saint Anselm College in New Hampshire, said he expects such incidents to happen again in the future.

"ICE, DHS (the Department of Homeland Security), and the White House have shown no indications that they are rethinking their approach to these deployments, and probably see the chaos and protests as beneficial to them," Galdieri said. "I think they are wrong to think this, but we'll just have to see what happens."

Xinhua - Agencies

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