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May, 1999


Marchers protest police brutality, demand justice



by Anne Jaclard and Paul Geist

New York-"No justice, no peace." New York City residents transformed that essential truth into daily activity for a solid two-and-a-half months following the Feb. 4 police murder of Amadou Diallo, an unarmed African immigrant, in a hail of 41 bullets. The demonstrations culminated April 15, when 10,000 people or more marched from the Brooklyn Bridge to lower Broadway in front of the federal building. So many people filled Brooklyn Bridge that you could see neither the beginning nor end of the march.

Billed as a "rally for justice and reconciliation" by a coalition of civil rights, community and religious organizations, unions and politicians, the orderly march and two rallies contrasted with the still-angry mood of the Black working people and youth who turned out in force. There was a strong representation of union members from the low-wage, mostly Black service and hospital unions. The crowd also included many whites, Latinos and Asians who have come to join the struggle against police brutality through the Diallo movement. Many people carried signs with the names of victims of police beatings and murders.

The protesters were both furious at how deep and wide are racism and brutality, and joyous about so many people coming together to fight back. Many were critical of the demonstration's call for "reconciliation" when nothing has changed and of the ten-point program for reforming the police unveiled there. The influence of politicians and union leaders could be seen in the mildness of the demands and one of them being to raise cops' pay. That one was roundly booed by the crowd every time it was read out.

Earlier protests had more militant themes. One called by Women for Justice kicked off a campaign of picketing police stations. Speakers said that in Black and Latino neighborhoods the police arrest all the young people and leave the drug dealers on the streets. One woman vowed to "dismantle and crush the police state that is forming in New York City."

The daily demonstrations at Police Plaza, which grew enormous and multi-racial over three weeks in March, were abruptly ended by Rev. Al Sharpton. In all, 1,200 people were arrested, including, on the last two days, CUNY professors, Chinese immigrants and Methodist ministers. In his speech to the crowd the last day, Sharpton said, "They said we'd never get the races to walk together-they not only walked, they went to jail together. We showed that the city will arrest non-violent protesters, but not violent police. We exposed the contradiction." In the same speech, however, Sharpton truncated the dialectic he had begun to articulate, saying, "We don't care if you're a socialist or a capitalist, we have to protect ourselves before we can have debates."

The same week was the start of daily pickets at the Brooklyn federal courthouse, where the cops who tortured Abner Louima are about to go on trial. The abiding theme of all the demonstrations has been mass opposition to Mayor Rudolph Giuliani's attempts to "clean up the city" by sacrificing the poor and minorities. He is hoping to run for higher office by appealing to racism.

Did April 15 mark a new stage of the mass movement or put a lid on it? Whereas Sharpton became the focus of the demonstrations due to his clear articulation of police brutality issues, his insistence on only symbolic law-breaking and legalistic demands may have held the movement back. It is also possible that this terrible killing has brought out so many ideas for discussion-including Mumia Abu-Jamal, institutional racism and loss of civil liberties-that New York will never be the same again.



by John Marcotte

New York-The April 3 National Emergency March for Justice and Against Police Brutality in Washington, D.C. brought together several thousand people from many cities and small towns who have been organizing for years around these issues. "People start to reminisce about what happened in their little towns years ago and do not forget their history-the struggle for civil rights. We are still in the midst of it-a few doors have opened and many have shut," said a president of a South Jersey branch of the NAACP.

Speakers addressed the crowd for several hours. One said, "Police brutality has been part of the fabric of this society since the formation of police to capture runaway slaves." Jane Bye of the Committee Against Anti-Asian Violence pointed out that the murder of Amadou Diallo in New York was "part of a long and violent history of police brutality against young Third World immigrants." A speaker from the Lakota Nation, Rosebud Reservation, brought "greetings from the invisible people."

Richard Perez of the National Congress for Puerto Rican Rights called for a higher level of unannounced civil disobedience at One Police Plaza in New York, as did Al Sharpton. Sharpton said, "You can't preach morality in Yugoslavia and ignore it in the U.S. You can't send our boys to Yugoslavia, and we are afraid when they walk the street in Chicago." Pam Africa called on us to unite to save Mumia Abu-Jamal.

The most powerful experience to me was when the family members of those murdered by police began to speak for several minutes each. The list went on and on-20, 30, you lost count! New York, Kentucky, Chicago, North Carolina, Ohio, Florida, Pittsburgh-you felt this is truly a national epidemic! The details of each case were horrifying. You began to see a pattern of sheer unprovoked brutality, of state cover-ups.

We had an open mike discussion on the bus on the trip home. A Puerto Rican mother who had been struggling for justice for eight years immediately said she was angry at Sharpton for emphasizing the Diallo case so much, when so many others have been struggling for years.

Several African-American women spoke to this thoughtfully, emphasizing that they were by no means apologists for Sharpton, but that he had called for reopening all the cases. More importantly, one cannot predict which is the case that will move masses to action; we had to see this as a process of all these cases building on each other. Diallo came after the Abner Louima case last year, with its mass march across Brooklyn Bridge, and that is part of its context.

One African-American woman explained that in the Louima case the movement stopped, partly because the Haitian-American community held itself apart from the African-American, and partly because once the lawyers got Louima's case, they went into the courts. "Whatever you can say about Sharpton, he is smart enough to know that, even when you are in court, you have to keep pressure on in the streets." She also mused about what it meant that Diallo was from Africa, the motherland, about the kind of resonance that had on the African diaspora.

When this movement started in front of Diallo's home on Feb. 7 and for seven weeks thereafter, it was nearly all Black with some Puerto Ricans. It gradually forced other sectors of society to realize that this wasn't a "Black problem," but a human problem. By April 15, the march of 10,000 across Brooklyn Bridge was rich in diversity of age, gender, class and sexual orientation. That march was living proof to me of NEWS & LETTERS' concept that throughout U.S. history Black masses have been at the forefront of social change.



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