Supporters and opponents of the recent toppling of a Confederate monument in North Carolina turned out in Chapel Hill on Saturday to assert their stances.
Seven arrests were made in connection to a gathering on McCorkle Place, the University of North Carolina-Chapel Hill media relations office said.
“Three arrests were for assault, the fourth for destruction of property and the fifth arrest for resisting an officer. The sixth arrest was for assault, destruction of property and inciting a riot. We are awaiting information on charges for the seventh arrest,” the school said.
More than 100 people were at the protests, Chancellor Carol Folt said in a conference call with journalists.
There were no serious injuries.
None of the seven people who were arrested are associated with the university, she said. “There were very tense moments at times,” she said of the protests.
The rival rallies came after 250 protesters knocked over the controversial “Silent Sam” Confederate statue at the University of North Carolina’s flagship campus on Monday night.
On Saturday people congregated at and near the spot where the statue was torn down, news footage showed. Police were on the scene in numbers as people held banners, chanted and marched. Confederate flags could be seen.
CNN affiliate WTVD reported a barricade was placed around the statue site. Protesters chanted “Hey hey, ho ho, white supremacy has got to go.”
Citing the volatile mood on the campus, the University of North Carolina on Friday urged people not to participate in the event.
“We do not know for sure what groups may attend, but we are mindful that the current atmosphere is highly charged, and protests that begin peacefully do not always remain that way,” the university said in a statement Friday.
“For this reason, we urge you not to attend. For those who do attend, please know that we will do all we can to protect and keep everyone safe.”
The school also said it learned that students and others have received threats in the wake of the toppling of the statue. It didn’t elaborate on the nature of the threats.
The university said it was working with Chapel Hill officials and law enforcement. It said streets might be shut down and traffic rerouted.
Three people have been charged with misdemeanors in connection with the toppling of the statue.
The suspects, none of whom are affiliated with the school, face charges of misdemeanor riot and misdemeanor defacing a public monument, according to CNN local affiliates.
The people haven’t been arrested and were not identified by the affiliates.
Thom Goolsby, a member of the UNC Board of Governors, said on Twitter that “Silent Sam” will be reinstalled in three months time “as required by state law.”
The statue is the latest among several Confederate monuments to be removed, as communities continue to deal with the legacy of a contentious chapter in American history.
Silent Sam was not the first Confederate monument to come down in North Carolina. In August 2017, authorities said seven people were arrested in connection with the toppling of the Confederate Soldiers Monument during a protest in Durham.
The monument came down two days after the Unite the Right Rally in Charlottesville, Virginia, that left counterprotester Heather Heyer dead.
CNN’s AnneClaire Stapleton, Steve Almasy and Marilia Brocchetto contributed to this report