Peace returns to Ferguson

US teen Michael Brown's funeral is due to take place on Monday and is likely to be a focal point for more demonstrations by angry protesters.

police wait to advance

(AAP)

Rival rallies - demanding justice for the unarmed black teenager shot two weeks ago by a white police officer, and in support of that police officer - brought people to the streets of a Missouri town.

But authorities in the St Louis suburb of Ferguson, where Brown was killed on August 9, reported Saturday night was the most peaceful in two weeks of racially charged demonstrations - some of them violent - over the 18-year-old's death.

Michael Brown's funeral, set to take place on Monday, is likely to be a focal point for more demonstrations by angry protesters.

Parallels have been drawn between Brown and Trayvon Martin, the unarmed African-American teenager shot and killed by a neighbourhood watch volunteer in Florida in 2012.

His father Tracy was in Ferguson on Saturday to address an event.

Protesters are also angry about the hardline police response to early demonstrations, with authorities using battle-grade hardware bought under federal programs from the US military.

President Barack Obama on Saturday ordered a review to determine "whether these programs are appropriate," whether training with the equipment is sufficient and whether there is enough federal oversight of the gear's use.

But there has also been support here for Wilson, who has gone underground since shooting Brown at least six times.

"Until you know the facts, you have no idea the situation he's in," Beth Zeiner, an insurance reviewer wearing a blue t-shirt with an "Officer Darren Wilson" badge sewn on it, told AFP.

"His life is also destroyed. There are so many factors but it has been one-sided from what we have seen."

House cleaner Laura, who did not want to give her last name, also wore a t-shirt in support of Wilson.

"I don't think there is any possibility of a fair trial at this point because basically, (the policeman) has been tried already by the media and by the public and by people who have allowed their emotions to overrule any reason that they may have," she said.

Sandra Fifer, a middle-aged woman who has been protesting on the main thoroughfare of West Florissant Avenue this past week, said protesters feel African Americans are treated unequally.

"We're not allowed, if I played my loud music that I like, had a barbecue with a bunch of African Americans, they would tell us to break it up," she said.

"Why? What are we doing different than them?"

In Staten Island, a borough of New York City, thousands demonstrated to protest the death of a black man placed in a chokehold by police - seen on an amateur video.

Eric Garner, 43, a father of six who was suspected of illegally selling cigarettes, was wrestled to the ground by several white police officers after resisting arrest on July 17.

Garner, who was obese and asthmatic and repeatedly complained he could not breathe, lost consciousness and was pronounced dead of a heart attack after being transferred to hospital.

"This is always happening in our community. Everyone has the right to feel safe," Tricia Mackmenbourgh, a mother of three sons, told AFP in New York.

"Ferguson, Staten Island, that's all tied in."


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