A chilling website apparently created by Dylann Roof has emerged in which the accused Charleston church shooter rails against African Americans and appears in photographs with guns and burning the US flag.
It came to light as a mournful vigil on Friday for the nine black worshippers killed at Emanuel African Methodist Episcopal Church gave way to anger and protests in Charleston and the state capital Columbia.
The church, one of the nation's most historic African-American places of worship, meanwhile reopened for worship, three days after a bloodbath that fuelled simmering racial tensions in the United States and reignited impassioned calls for gun-control laws.
A rambling 2500-word manifesto on the website, laced with racist lingo and spelling errors, does not bear the 21-year-old suspected white supremacist's name.
But its first-person style, its title - "Last Rhodesian" - and references to Charleston and apartheid South Africa suggested he was its author. There were also photos of Roof on the site.
Roof, who went on the run after Wednesday's shooting, was caught a day later in neighbouring North Carolina and is in solitary confinement in jail charged with nine counts of murder.
He faces the death penalty if convicted.
The FBI said it was "taking steps to verify the authenticity" of the website.
Sombre mourning turned to anger on Saturday, with a rally at the state legislature in Columbia, where the Confederate flag has been a focal point for controversy for years.
Unlike US and state flags, it was not lowered to half-staff after the killings - because, officials say, doing so by South Carolina law requires approval from the state legislature.
While some whites consider the Civil War-era flag an emblem of Southern regional pride and heritage, others - black and white - see it as a sinister symbol of white supremacy and racism.
Several politicians, including US President Barack Obama, weighed in on the controversy on Saturday.
Former Republican White House hopeful Mitt Romney posted on Twitter: "it's time to take down flag in SC."
In response, Obama tweeted: "Good point, Mitt," with a link to Romney's comment.
Obama, who said after the Charleston shooting the United States should closely examine its gun laws, also recalled firearms deaths statistics on Twitter on Saturday.
"Here are the stats: Per population, we kill each other with guns at a rate 297x more than Japan, 49x more than France, 33x more than Israel," Obama tweeted.
On Friday, Roof appeared via videolink in court and heard devout relatives of the dead - which included Emanuel's chief pastor and state senator Clementa Pinckney - express forgiveness.
The shooting was the worst attack on a US place of worship in decades and comes at a time of revived racial tensions in many parts of the nation.
In San Francisco, Democratic presidential hopeful Hillary Clinton called for tougher gun laws in the United States in the wake of the tragedy.
Roof's arrest warrant revealed how he allegedly shot the six women and three men, aged 26 through 87, multiple times with a high-calibre handgun and then stood over a survivor to make a "racially inflammatory" statement.
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