Thursday, May 18, 2023

UN EXPERTS HEAR HUMAN RIGHTS ABUSE AT THE SHABAZZ CENTER!

 

UN EXPERTS HEAR HUMAN RTS ABUSE AT SHABAZZ CENTER

by ‘bro. Zayid’

 

            May 3rd saw experts from the United Nations hear testimony on human rights violations facing people of African descent at the hands of law enforcement in New York City!

            It took place at the historic Malcolm X/Betty Shabazz Educational Center, (The Shabazz Center) the former Audubon Ballroom, where Malcolm was assassinated in spectacle fashion before 400 people and his wife and children on the still haunting Sunday that was February 21, 1965, and where he launched his courageously ambitious Organization of Afro American Unity.

MALCOLM X PUTTING THE POLICE KILLING 
OF NOI LEADER RONALD STOKES ON BLAST!


            It was the ideal venue for these hearings, because it was Malcolm who sought to transform our struggle from Civil Rights to Human Rights by bringing the oppression of our people before the international human rights community when he was viciously taken from us.

            It was brought together by the United Nations AntiRacism Coalition (UNARC), a coalition of organizations dedicated to AntiRacism in the Americas.  (https://unarc.org/ )

            It came on the heels of two important convenings on the issue-The 2021 International Commission of Inquiry on Systematic Racist Police Violence Against People of African Descent in the United States, which took place virtually from January 18 to February 6 (https://inquirycommission.org/report/ ) and the 2021 Spirit of Mandela International Tribunal, which examined human rights violations against Black Brown and Indigenous Peoples in the United States. (https://www.tribunal2021.com/ ) The latter had a wider range of examination, looking at human rights violations in the form of police violence, mass incarceration, the targeting and incarceration of activists from these communities, environmental racism, and health care discrimination. It took place over the weekend of October 22, 2021 and was also held at The Shabazz Center.
            New York is one of several cities that these experts are hearing testimony. Other cities include Atlanta, Chicago, Minneapolis, Washington DC and Los Angeles over the course of 12 days.

            The body of experts, known as the Expert Mechanism to Advance Racial Justice and Equality in the context of Law Enforcement, or the EMLER, was created in 2021 by a United Nations Human Rights Resolutions UNHRC 43/1 and UNHRC 47/21 in the aftermath of the spectacle police killing of George Floyd. 

            Participants and the Audience heard testimony on AntiBlack Racism by Immigration Authorities, on Abuse by Prison Authorities, on the systematic judicial and police violence of the ‘War on Drugs’ and the glaring violence that drove the convening of the gathering-racialized police violence.

            Attorney Roger Wareham of the December 12th Movement had this to say about the hearing:

"The hearing is a continuation of UN investigations of US human rights violations of Black people that began in 1994 when the December 12th Movement International Secretariat helped organize the visit of the first UN Special Rapporteur on Racism to the United States.

            These investigations help fulfill Malcolm X's call for us to place the situation of Black people in the U.S. on the international agenda.

            “If the experts present the evidence they've heard honestly, their report will expose the systemic nature of white supremacy in law enforcement, the role of poverty in creating crime, push international public opinion to condemn the hypocrisy of U.S. so-called democracy and aid our domestic struggle for liberation," he finished.

 

            By the way, it was the December 12th Movement whose organized protests of the early 1990s led to the preservation of the Audubon Ballroom.

            Wareham then presented to the body survivors of the racist ‘stop and frisk’ and ‘war of drugs’ campaigns. Among them was David Norman, who detailed how heroin tore through his Harlem community from the 50s through the 70s, and through his family affecting him and his parents. As David finished, he stopped everyone in their tracks when he quoted top Nixon official and ‘War on Drugs’ co-architect John Ehrlichman to capture and some up its genocidal intentionality.

 

            “You want to know what this was really all about?” Ehrlichman raised rhetorically.

                “The Nixon campaign in 1968, and the Nixon White House after that, had two enemies: the           antiwar left and black people.

                “You understand what I’m saying?

                “We knew we couldn’t make it illegal to be either against the war or black, but by getting the public to associate the hippies with marijuana and blacks with heroin, and then criminalizing both heavily, we could disrupt those communities.

                “We could arrest their leaders, raid their homes, break up their meetings, and vilify them night after night on the evening news.

                “Did we know we were lying about the drugs?

                Of course we did.”

 

            To this day, the national government has not taken one ounce of responsibility for the racist intent and disastrous impact of this ‘war.’

            Beloved Attorney Jill Soffiyah Elijah, who has represented a number of Black political prisoners over the years, including most recently Sundiata Acoli, presented and interviewed a panel of prison abuse survivors in New York state to illustrate how that abuse permeates its correctional facilities.   

            The question of the abuse of female prisoners and how the incarceration of Black and Brown women is increasing was painfully captured in the story of Aqirah Stanley, who shared what she witnessed and endured when she was incarcerated. Aqirah’s recount of how she was mistreated and how other pregnant female prisoners were especially mistreated stopped everyone in their tracks, yet she affirmed her dignity by courageously risking to give birth in her cell rather than endure the overshackling and abuse that came with hospital based deliveries.

            “Because no one deserves to be shackled while they are in labor,” she said pointedly.

            Kalief Browder’s brother, Anthony Browder, also comported himself with great dignity retelling his brother’s horror story.

            Anthony not only recounted the overwhelming abuse that his brother suffered after being wrongly sent to Rikers Island that ultimately led to his suicide, he also recounted how the trauma of losing Kalief destroyed their mother’s health and how she died a year later from the medical fall out of that trauma.

            On racialized police violence, Gwen Carr who has become a resource and voice for other mothers who have lost loved ones to police violence, was a picture of grace and was amazingly understated in her recount of what happened to her son, Eric Garner, but proudly lifted up the impact of the people’s movement that led to the implementation of the Eric Garner Bill, banning chokeholds by the police in New York City. It came at an enormous price, because it came at the cost of Eric’s life. She could have also lifted up how the trauma of losing her son destroyed the health of her husband and her granddaughter’s health. They both died in the aftermath of his death. Erica, Eric’s daughter, had been very public about how her father’s death was affecting her health, just before she died.  She was only 27 when she died. 27.



            Natacha Pannell, the sister of Phillip Pannell who was killed by Teaneck NJ police officer Gary Spath, joined by her mother, Theresa Dantzler, told how it took 32 years for their version of the facts in her brother’s case to be proven that it was in fact the truth. Pannell, only 16 when he was shot to death by Spath, was shot in the back with his hands up. The police and the state created a story that had the teenager was turning towards Spath as if he was going to shoot at them. It took a recently aired four part investigatory documentary Model America, which examined the case against the backdrop of the façade of a liberal suburb, to vindicate the family’s position. Yet, even after that, to this day, no one in Teaneck leadership will acknowledge the deadly injustice done to Phillip and his family.

            It ended with an amazing note of resilience as Hertensia Peterson, the courageous aunt of Akai Gurley who was killed by a NYC police officer in 2015, led the body with Assata Shakur’s empowering pledge...

 

            “...It is our duty to fight for our freedom.

                It is our duty to win.

                We must love each other and support each other.

                We have nothing to lose but our chains...”

 

The EMLER, the experts, will present a report on these hearings to the UN Human Rights Council at its 54th session in September-October 2023...

*’bro. Zayid’ Muhammad is the lead organizer and press officer for the Malcolm X Commemoration Committee. Follow them on Facebook. He can be reached at babazayid@gmail.com...

©2023

Tuesday, February 21, 2023

About The Ray Wood 'Confession'...A People's Analytical Rewind...*

 

Sunday, January 1, 2023

They Won't Be Home for The Holidays! Remembering Unheralded Police Violence Victims in New Jersey! by bro Zayid Muhammad

 

They won’t be home for the holidays!

Remembering Unheralded Police Violence Victims in New Jersey

by Zayid Muhammad

 

            One of the aspects of police violence taking innocent Black and Brown lives is how its trauma rips through the families of those left behind, even in those rare moments when accountability actually happens.

            Take for example, from among the more well known cases, such as the Eric Garner case. His mother, the amazing Gwen Carr, has become an incredible beacon of strength for Black and Brown mothers all over the country, but not without paying another price along the way. Her granddaughter, Eric’s daughter, Erica Garner, who was becoming a very vocal presence against police brutality in her own right, died suddenly from a cardiac episode just months after detailing on Democracy Now, an important social justice national news source, how the trauma of her father’s death was affecting her health.

            She was only 27 years old...27 years old...And had just given birth to her second child, a son, whom she named after her father, Eric, just a few months before.

            That interview has bone chilling, near prophetic dimensions.



            Not to be missed is that she suffered her episode on Christmas Eve and passed on December 30th, 2017, in the heart of an already painful ‘holiday’ season.

            The Earl Faison case, the most noted case in New Jersey where some measure of accountability took place, saw his fiancée also die not long after his death. She too was quite young.

            Earl’s sister, Taaj Williams, in a 20 year retrospective on her brother’s death said very pointedly “that our family goes through this every time another one of these cases happens.”

            “Every time”...I restate here with emphasis, because of the continuing litany of police brutality cases that they have been tormented by for over 20 years now. And her brother’s killers, five Orange police officers, did federal time in that case.

            More recently in New Jersey, we have the Jerome Reid case...

            December 30th, again in the heart of the holiday season, 2014, Jerome is shot and killed with his hands up on videotape by Bridgeton police officer, Braheme Davis, at point blank range in his chest and head. As if that was not enough, we would soon learn that Davis, not only held a grudge against Reid from a past police encounter he had as a teenager, but who also had a competing personal interest in Reid’s former girlfriend. Yet no Jersey prosecutor, in that case from Cumberland County, nor from the federal government later for that matter, saw fit to charge Davis.

            Jerome’s mother, Sheila Reid, who already had some health challenges, valiantly became a strong voice against police brutality. She became the ‘soul’ of the Justice Monday protest of the People’s Organization for Progress, a weekly protest that was launched in February 2016, to lift up the cases of Jersey police victims that have not been lifted up in national media, much like this article attempts to do. The Justice Monday protests went on without interruption for nearly 300 Mondays until the Covid Pandemic. Courageous though she be, her health too failed and she passed just away recently without the officer who killed her son on videotape being held accountable.

            Other continual instances that sharpen the traumatic dimensions of this kind of loss are the victims’ birth anniversaries, the anniversaries of their tragic deaths, and the point of this article, the holidays when families come together across generations and long distances.

            Several New Jersey cases merit spotlighting. In this wave, however, New Jersey has a tool of accountability that it is simply not employing with integrity...It’s Independent Prosecutor’s Bill, signed into law by a nervous Governor Phil Murphy in 2018, a law that puts the investigation of any deaths in police custody in the hands of the Attorney General’s office and takes them out of the hands of the former county-based prosecutorial framework. Murphy was scared to death to sign this bill until a young man named Jameek Lowery was viciously beaten to death in the custody of Paterson police while in a mental health crisis, and the streets of Paterson got hot with protests, even though the bill had already passed both the New Jersey Assembly and Senate.

            The bill was stewarded through the New Jersey Legislature by a brave, and at the time, brand new assemblywoman Brittany Timberlake, who explained why she was so determined to get it done in a very pointed way, ‘I’m pushing this bill for my son.’

            Unfortunately, since the inception of the bill, the Attorney General has hardly been transparent at all with his investigations and how that office has been dismissing claims against police officers in some cases that scream for something else!

            Take most recently their dismissal of the case of Hasani Best, for instance. Best was killed in August 2020, a day after the New Jersey Supreme Court ruled against Newark Mayor Ras Baraka’s groundbreaking Civilian Complaint Review Board ordinance, one that give that city a CCRB with Subpoena Power, the Authority to do Independent and Concurrent Investigations, one that had a social justice based community character and a Disciplinary Matrix police leadership had to abide by.

            Best was in a mental health crisis, one in which his situation was actually contained by several Asbury Park police officers, including one who already knew him. He had nothing on him but a butter knife and the authorities had supports better suited to address that kind of crisis en route when the officer who actually knew Hasani, Sargeant Sean DeShader, went ahead and shot him to death anyway.

            Jersey’s Attorney General, with a new tool of ‘public integrity and accountability’ in hand, the Independent’s Prosecutor’s Bill, let it slide!

            Hasani’s former wife, a valiant young Kay White, who organized a number of meaningful rallies in Asbury Park all the way from New York City where she resides, is now enduring a torturous pain management challenge that is defying any health challenge she has actually been diagnosed for!

            That is unresolved ongoing Trauma!



            New Year’s Day, January 1st, 2021, Carl Dorsey finds himself suddenly swarmed by undercover Newark police officers and is shot to death by Detective Rod Simpkins. Simpkins get lauded as ‘heroic’ in its aftermath by the Newark’s Fraternal Order of Police, but he is actually shown to have an abusive history, one partially documented by the epic ACLU Petition to the Justice Department that would culminate in the Federal Consent Decree now overseeing a court mandated set of reforms over the Newark Police.

            Clearly those mandated reforms were not enough to have made a difference here. Simpkins should have been made gone long ago, but he wasn’t, and it cost an innocent Carl Dorsey his life...On New Year’s Day!...Not to mention that he was born on Xmas eve. Tell me, someone please, tell me how is the family of this senselessly slain father of four going to have a happy holiday season???

            His family is still reeling in grief, shock and disbelief.



            On the 4th of July, 2021, retired major Gulia Dale III, besieged by the cacophony of local holiday fireworks in his suburban home in Newton, goes into a mental health crisis.

            His wife, worried that her husband may harm himself, calls the police for help. Twelve seconds upon their arrival and encounter with Dale, he is dead as they fired on him immediately,...a decorated career vet who gave his entire adult life to the US Army killed like that on the 4th of July of all days!

            His sister, Valerie, and his niece, Boshia, courageously pursue justice for him with great dignity and resolve, but are clearly unnerved when they have to recount his horrific ordeal in public.

            Incredibly, not much earlier and worsening their pain, a white vet, Edwin Greene, in a similar mental health crisis, in the same town, his situation was properly contained and he was taken into custody alive, even though he actually fired on the officers who first encountered him!

            So much for ‘Thank you for your service’!

            Just in September, Bernard Placide Jr. of Englewood, is killed on the back end of a mental health crisis, one in which the worst aspects of it was over, one in which his family only needed the police, so they thought, to take him to the hospital to get help. He wound up getting shot to death while in the agonizing, but non- threatening, throes of being tasered!

            He was only 22...Only 22!

            While his mother, Myrlene Hilaire, a brave proud Haitian immigrant, is trying to be strong in pursuing justice for her son, the Thanksgiving holiday ripped through her family and home, painfully recalling her son’s central presence. With culinary gifts, Bernard was not only a presence at their family table, he was the family cook who prepared their epic annual holiday feast. That and other dimensions of his humanity will only get marginally lifted up in Jersey press rooms as will what that family now has to go through in the aftermath of his death.

            Bernard’s death, incredibly, comes on the heels of an MSNBC Four Part Documentary Series ‘Model America’ which documented how the local authorities in the Englewood-Teaneck area of Bergen County refused to acknowledge what was wrong with the police killing of 16 year old Phillip Pannell, who was shot in the back with his hands up by officer Gary Spath back in 1990. The incident ignited an uprising that totally shattered that suburban community’s treasured ‘Model City’ reputation. From the looks of what just happened to Bernard, and its continued denial of what happened to Phillip, that Bergen county community has learned nothing at all from all that was wrong from Phillip’s still haunting case.

            To make matters even worse, we have just learned that the Englewood Police Department intends to promote the officer who killed Bernard, Luana Sharpe, to detective with absolutely no regard for an investigation of the incident that is supposed to be in motion by the New Jersey Attorney General’s office in accord with Independent Prosecutor’s law just after New Year’s!

            Damn the law, this police force is saying, damn the hurt to his family, damn public trust, we’re going move this one up now!



            So none of these men will be home for the holidays! And as long as the State of New Jersey and the Federal Government refuse to demonstrate the will to implement real change in police accountability, those holidays will continue to be tortuous tormenting times for their families with dimensions of anguish that may never see the light of day and that so painfully deserves real support.

            We need to fix that.

            Make the NJ Attorney General do Transparent Investigations of police involved killings.

            Strengthen Federal Consent Decrees with strong discipline for officers and police leadership who refuse to comply with mandated reforms and with civilian oversight that includes specific enforcement and accountability measures for abusive officers.

            Pass into law with the fierce urgency of now strong police reform bills such as the CCRB Bill, Ban No Knock Raid Bill, the Police Transparency Bill and more.

            Legislators, how about daring to lead from a place of principle and courage; not a place of fear, expediency, privilege and non-transparency, as is Jersey’s ‘gangster’ political tradition...

            We say this, not just in the name of Minneapolis’ George Floyd, but in the name of Jerome Reid, Hasani Best, Carl Dorsey, Major Gulia Dale III, Bernard Placide Jr., Maurice Gordon and Thelonious McKnight...New Jersey’s George Floyds!

            The time has come...

 

Zayid Muhammad is the organizer of Newark Communities for Accountable Policing, (NCAP) and the Newark strategist for Equal Justice USA.  A veteran activist with a social justice profile of more than 40 years, he is the founding press officer of Malcolm X Commemoration Committee-NYC, now marking its 30th anniversary and was recently spotlighted in the critically acclaimed Netflix docuseries Who Killed Malcolm X. He is a contributor to the recently released ‘The Trials of Mumia Abu-Jamal: A Biography in 25 Voices’, edited by Todd Steven Burroughs, Diasporic Africa Press...

©2022

#