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From The Final Call Newspaper

Talk, tears but not much progress Painful reality, police killings come to mind with anniversary of George Floyd’s death

By The Final Call
- May 25, 2021


Capture AP George Floyd anniversary


by Barrington M. Salmon and Naba’a Muhammad
The Final Call @TheFinalCall

As the first anniversary of George Floyd’s murder approached, Blacks and others reflected demands made since May 25, 2020, the day the 46-year-old Black man was murdered by a White cop as onlookers screamed for him to stop kneeling on a dying man’s neck—and even videotaped his crime.

What has happened after calls for change from millions who took to the streets night and day for months after Mr. Floyd’s untimely death? they asked.

Most troubling, activists and advocates say, is in the midst of unprecedented social unrest and sustained pressure on law enforcement, the number of Blacks killed and injured by cops across the United States has continued unabated.

Col. Lamar Davis, superintendent of the Louisiana State Police, speaks about the agency’s release of video involving the death of Ronald Greene, at a press conference held Friday, May 21, 2021, in Baton Rouge, La. Greene was jolted with stun guns, put in a chokehold and beaten by troopers, and his death is now the subject of a federal civil rights investigation. (AP Photo/Melinda Deslatte)

Police killings have not slowed and “at least 64 people have died at the hands of police since Derek Chauvin’s trial began. More than half were people of color,” reported BusinessInsider.com.

Mr. Chauvin, who was seen in widely viewed bystander video pressing his knee into Floyd’s neck as the Black man said he couldn’t breathe, was convicted in April of second-degree unintentional murder, third-degree murder and manslaughter. He’s to be sentenced June 25.

The article referred to findings by the New York Times that included cops killing “an average of 3 people a day since the trial started on March 29.”

And, it added, more than half of those killed were non-White.

The fatal killings included the police shooting of unarmed 13-year-old Adam Toledo in a Chicago alley, Michael Hughes, 32, was fatally shot by police at a Quality Inn in Jacksonville, Florida, a 40-year-old mentally ill man in Claremont, New Hampshire, was shot multiple times and killed after an exchange of gunfire with state police, and in Brooklyn Center, Minnesota, a White female cop fatally shot unarmed Daunte Wright, during a traffic stop. He died 10 minutes from where officer Chauvin was on trial. Some Blacks asked if the shootings were in retaliation for the trial and conviction of Mr. Chauvin?

Of the 64 incidents reviewed by The Times, at least 42 involved people accused of having firearms, more than 12 involved people who were mentally ill, and several involved domestic violence, the article said.

“Additionally, almost all the victims were men, the vast majority Black or Latino. The majority were also young; many of whom under the age of 30 include four who were just teenagers,” Business Insider reported.

Although Blacks account for about 13 percent of the U.S. population, they are killed by police at more than twice the rate of White Americans.

‘Nothing has changed’


This image from video from Louisiana state police state trooper Dakota DeMoss’ body-worn camera, shows troopers holding up Ronald Greene before paramedics arrived on May 10, 2019, outside of Monroe, La. The video obtained by The Associated Press shows Louisiana state troopers stunning, punching and dragging the Black man as he apologizes for leading them on a high-speed chase, footage authorities refused to release in the two years since Greene died in police custody. (Louisiana State Police via AP)

As she surveys the national landscape, Cheryl Dorsey sees little evidence of the racial reckoning once widely spoken of.

“I don’t think we’re seeing a criminal justice reckoning. What we’ve seen weekly is that nothing has changed,” she told The Final Call, referring to the recent police killings of Ma’Khia Bryant, 16; Michael Leon Hughes, 32, Iremamber Sykap, 16; and Anthony Thompson Jr., 17, killed by a school resource officer in a high school bathroom after reports that a student had brought a gun onto campus.

Ms. Dorsey, a retired sergeant with the Los Angeles Police Department, is a vocal critic of police misconduct and police violence.

The recent release of video showing the end of a high-speed chase near Monroe, Louisiana in 2019 and the resulting death of Ronald Greene after he was beaten, tased and dragged by Louisiana State Police illustrates the dangers Blacks face from law enforcement daily, she said.

“The officers who kill people will be covered by qualified immunity and the officers’ bosses will lie,” said Ms. Dorsey, a Los Angeles native, commentator and author of “Black and Blue: The Creation of A Social Advocate Vol II.” And in a recent Twitter post, she explained that state police brutally chastised Mr. Greene because he fled: “Cops often ‘put hands on’ someone who flees. #RonaldGreene was punished; and then the cop took a victory lap when he bragged about beating the m-fer.”

Louisiana law enforcement officials stonewalled Mr. Greene’s family for two years, lied in a statement about how he died and refused to release body cam footage. But the Associated Press got ahold of arrest video, released it May 19 and released a second, more detailed video on May 21, which led Louisiana State Police to release the full video the same day.

Lee Merritt, an attorney for the Greene family during a May 21 interview on MSNBC, said the superintendent of the Louisiana State Police is dealing with a department “rife with corruption and brutality.”

State Police Superintendent Lamar Davis, who is Black, held a news conference to release what he called all video available at the time of Mr. Greene’s death.

“We cannot comment on the any of the conduct of the troopers related to the incident because the evidence of the conduct is under criminal investigation by other state and federal authorities,” Supt. Davis said, according to the Monroe (La.) News-Star.

Philonise Floyd, the brother of George Floyd, talks to a crowd of supporters during a “Justice for Pamela Turner” rally on the two-year-anniversary of Turner’s death, Thursday, May 13, 2021, in Baytown, Texas. Turner was fatally shot in 2019 by a police officer in the Houston suburb after a struggle over his stun gun. (Godofredo A. Vásquez/Houston Chronicle via AP)

“Nor can I provide specifics of the investigation for the same reason,” he said. He did promise reforms had been made in how state police are to handle such encounters.

Mr. Merritt said he had long been asking police officials for files in the case. State police had told the family the bloody and bruised Black man died from a car crash.

“There must be criminal accountability for several acts and there must be an entire revamp of that unit,” said Mr. Merritt. “Ronald Greene was pepper-sprayed while on the ground. What you’re seeing is gratuitous violence. They were stomping on him, spraying him—actions any reasonable person would know could likely lead to his death and certainly be far in excess of anything necessary for a man who completely surrendered and was in handcuffs.”

There is a federal and state investigation underway, the attorney continued. He wants officers involved in Mr. Greene’s death to face administrative and criminal consequences for violations of the Constitution and the Louisiana state code.

“We can’t just move on from here and say this was bad and someone passed away,” Mr. Merritt said.

Ashley Shelton is the founder, president and CEO of The Power Coalition for Equity and Justice, a Louisiana-based coalition that works to build power and lift the voices of traditionally disenfranchised communities.

Antoinette Dorsey-James holds a picture of her sister Pamela Turner during a news conference outside the Harris County Civil Court in Houston on Thursday, May 16, 2019. Turner was killed during an altercation with a Baytown Police Department officer Monday night at The Brixton Apartments complex she lived at in Baytown, Texas. (Godofredo A Vasquez/Houston Chronicle via AP)

“This is an extremely painful time. People have seen and heard the video and are outraged,” she said. “This isn’t the first time. There was a killing in Shreveport. There’s just a lot of work that has to be done. I did not watch it but I listened to the video. I do not have the emotional capacity to see another Black man die.”

Floyd prosecutions aren’t over

Meanwhile federal legislation that was supposed to help rein cops in is stalled and didn’t meet the president’s goal of having the bill named after Mr. Floyd signed into law by the anniversary of his death.

The conviction of Mr. Chauvin, who is awaiting sentencing, may also be appealed. Talk has emerged of a possible mistrial because a Black juror attended a march marking the anniversary of the 1963 March on Washington last summer. One theme among march speakers was “Get Your Knee Off Our Necks.”

The trial of three former Minneapolis police officers charged with aiding and abetting in the death of George Floyd was pushed back to March 2022, after a judge’s ruling. Thomas Lane, J. Kueng and Tou Thao were scheduled to face trial Aug. 23 on charges they aided and abetted both murder and manslaughter.

All four officers face federal charges that allege they violated Mr. Floyd’s civil rights during his arrest last year.


Judge Peter Cahill said he changed the date so the federal case can go forward first. He also said he felt the need to put some distance between the three officers’ trial and Mr. Chauvin’s due to all the publicity around the case.

Harry “Spike” Moss, who has lived in Minneapolis since age three, said the George Floyd verdict is only one case.

“Systematic racism is in every city and state in America,” he said. “Racism is woven into every fiber of the United States. Lawyers, judges, doctors, dentists, everyone. You can’t snap your fingers and change people. Trump got 70 million people to vote for him. Those are the same people who attacked the capital supporting Trump who is the second coming of Hitler.”

“Every part of the U.S. is White racism. It starts at a very young age. Racism is alive and well,” he said. The longtime activist and youth organizer added, “This is a very racist country and people of color need to stand together.”

“Power concedes nothing without a struggle. The key is to fall in love with each other, respect each other and not be afraid to call your African American and holla ‘Black Power!’ We’re not willing to be One. Don’t be an easy target to be scattered. We need to be a fist. We’ve never needed civil rights. We needed human rights,” he added.

Convictions like Mr. Chauvin’s remain extraordinarily rare. Out of the thousands of deadly police shootings in the U.S. since 2005, about 140 officers have been charged with murder or manslaughter and just seven were convicted of murder, according to data maintained by Phil Stinson, a criminologist at Bowling Green State University.

Criteria established by a landmark 1989 Supreme Court ruling on the use of force by police has afforded officer wide protections along with prosecutors reluctant to try cops and juries hesitant to convict.

Instead of just prosecuting officers after shootings happen, more must be done to prevent such encounters from happening in the first place, said Eugene Collins, who was a local organizer for the NAACP’s Baton Rouge, Louisiana, branch when Alton Sterling, a Black man selling CDs in front of a convenience store, was shot and killed by a White police officer in July 2016. The two officers involved in the encounter weren’t charged in his death.

Activists agree the fight for police reform and a more just legal system is far from over.

Criminal defense attorney Stan Germán described watching the Greene murder and viewing autopsy pictures as “sickening but not surprising.”

“Lynching in modern day America takes place at the hands of officers with a gun and a badge,” said Mr. Germán, executive director of the New York County Defender Services. “It’s been going on for generations but only now is America able to witness the murders on their screens. How many others are there? The FBI should open up an investigation into the death of every person who has died as a result of police interaction … this is not about ‘bad apples,’ rather, the apple orchard is rotten at its core.”

Calling the roll on Black suffering

Elizabeth City, N.C., is one of a number of U.S. cities and municipalities where police killings triggered peaceful protests. There have been ongoing protests since Pasquotank County deputies fired 14 times at Andrew Brown, Jr. who his family says was in his car, afraid for his life and driving away from deputies to keep from being killed.

District Attorney Andrew Womble said May 18 the deputies who shot and killed Mr. Brown were justified in their actions and would not face criminal charges.

Mr. Womble showed police body camera video to try to illustrate his contention.

Sheriff’s deputies were at Mr. Brown’s home in April to serve arrest and search warrants following an investigation that authorities said linked him to drug-related crimes.

The time the deputies interacted with Mr. Brown—from the moment they jumped out of a truck to the moment they pulled Mr. Brown’s body out of his crashed vehicle—was 44 seconds.

Mr. Brown’s family and attorneys said the video shows him backing away from and turning away from deputies in an effort to drive off.

“We were able to see Mr. Brown sitting in his vehicle—that he was ambushed as the sheriff’s office made their way to his residence,” one attorney for the Brown family previously said. “Appearing to be surprised, at all times his hands were visible. At all times he did not appear to be a threat.”

Mr. Womble said Mr. Brown struck a deputy twice with his vehicle, although he said he has no evidence that any deputy was injured during the incident.

After deputies fired their weapons, Mr. Brown’s car traveled a short distance before crashing into a tree. No weapon was found inside the car.

The police shooting, described as an “execution” by Mr. Brown’s family members, has drawn national attention to the small, majority Black city in the state’s rural northeastern corner.

The ACLU of North Carolina said in a statement, “It should not come as a surprise that the criminal legal system has upheld the legitimacy of another police murder of a Black person. Communities deserve justice and accountability, but history shows justice for people of color is rare in a system that was built upon slavery and has been modified over time to control and limit the lives of those who are not White.” Immediate police shootings and painful anniversaries marked a continuing crisis in America.

In Texas, family members and supporters of Pamela Turner, a Black woman who was fatally shot by a police officer in a Houston suburb, rallied for justice in her name, the second anniversary of her death.

Demonstrators joined prominent civil rights attorney Ben Crump—who is representing Ms. Turner’s family and other families of Black people who have died at the hands of police officers—outside the apartment complex in Baytown, Texas, where the shooting happened.

Mr. Crump had invoked Ms. Turner’s name April 20, the day of Mr. Chauvin’s historic conviction.

The officer who killed Pamela Turner “could have created verbal commands. He could have created distance,” the civil rights lawyer said May 13. “He could have called for backup.”

The dozens at the rally included relatives of those whose names have become rallying cries in the movement against racial injustice in policing, including Mr. Floyd, Breonna Taylor and Jacob Blake. They joined the Turner family in demanding the officer accused of killing her be held accountable.

Ms. Turner, 44, was killed May 13, 2019, after a confrontation with Baytown Officer Juan Delacruz, in the parking lot of the complex where they both lived. Officer Delacruz shot Ms. Turner after the two struggled over his stun gun. Officer Delacruz was indicted in September 2020 on a charge of aggravated assault by a public servant.

If convicted on the felony charge, he could be sentence to up to five years to life in prison. Officer Delacruz’ attorney said his client is on administrative assignment with the Baytown police department.

The defense lawyer has maintained his client’s innocence, saying Officer Delacruz was defending himself. Ms. Turner’s family and their attorneys have said she may have been suffering a mental health crisis at the time of the shooting, and that Officer Delacruz knew she had mental health issues. Ms. Turner was diagnosed with paranoid schizophrenia in 2005.

In Columbus, Ohio city officials agreed to pay a $10 million settlement to the family of Andre Hill, a Black man who was fatally shot by a White Columbus police officer last December. It is the largest such settlement in city history.

Body cam footage showed the victim emerging from a garage holding a cellphone.

Mr. Hill, 47, was shot by Officer Adam Coy, who was fired and has pled not guilty to murder and reckless homicide charges.

“No amount of money will ever bring Andre Hill back to his family, but we believe this is an important and necessary step in the right direction,” Columbus City Attorney Zach Klein said in a statement.

Mr. Hill was visiting a family friend when he was shot. Officer Coy and another officer had responded to a neighbor’s non-emergency complaint about someone stopping and starting a car outside.

“He was bringing me Christmas money. He didn’t do anything,” a woman inside the house shouted at police after the shooting. Officer Coy, who had a long history of complaints from citizens, was fired Dec. 28 for failing to activate his body camera and for not providing medical aid to Mr. Hill.

Ronald E. Hampton was a police officer with Washington D.C.’s Metropolitan Police Department for 24 years. “We’ve been talking about reforms and changes for more than 50 years. We need to look at the history of reform,” he said.

“Since the 1994 Crime Bill, they gave police a lot of money. You can’t pay people to be right. I haven’t seen any changes nor have police officers become more respectful to our people. That’s why we’re at this place. This is not something we dreamed up out of thin air, this isn’t something out of our imaginations.”

Surprisingly, Mr. Hampton said, people want more police and think more training is the issue. “I believe that we need to invest in education because some people just don’t know,” he conceded.

But, he continued, “We have endured bad treatment by the police and other institutions. This is not how I am made. It’s unacceptable to me. I don’t need to be treated like s–t and beaten all the time,” said the former leader of the National Black Police Association.

“It just isn’t working. We need to get rid of it and get something else,” he said.

Mr. Hampton supports abolition of the criminal justice system. “If we abolish it, individuals can do other things,” he asserted. “There needs to be a concentrated effort to serve people as best we can. We need money for housing, schools, mental health, hospitals.”

The Associated Press contributed to this report.

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From The Final Call Newspaper

War on the horizon! Israel unleashes devastating offensive on Palestinians

By Brian E. Muhammad, Staff Writer
- May 18, 2021


Palestinians inspect their destroyed houses following overnight Israeli airstrikes in town of Beit Hanoun, northern Gaza Strip, Friday, May 14, 2021. (AP Photo/Khalil Hamra)


The drumbeat of war is once again echoing loudly in the Middle East. World leaders and voices of reason are scrambling to avert what is already deadly fallout in occupied Palestine where aggression by the Zionist State of Israel has flared up and countermeasures by resistance groups like Hamas and Islamic Jehad has intensified.

Live broadcasts captured Israeli air strikes plummeting the Al-Shouk Towers, a 14-story building housing businesses and media offices in Gaza. Israeli missiles destroyed government buildings and targeted homes. Six senior leaders of the resistance group, Hamas, including its Gaza Brigade Commander, Bassem Issa were killed.

Hamas confirmed the commander’s death and the loss of “other leaders and warriors” and said in a statement: “Thousands of leaders and soldiers will follow in their footsteps.”

“If they (Israeli forces) want to escalate, the resistance is ready, if they want to stop, the resistance is ready,” Hamas leader Ismail Haniyeh said.

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U.S. President Joe Biden expressed support for a cease-fire between Israel and Gaza’s militant Hamas rulers in a call to Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu on May 17, but stopped short of demanding an immediate stop to the eight days of Israeli airstrikes and Hamas rocket barrages that have killed more than 200 people, most of them Palestinian.

Palestinians walk next to the remains of a destroyed 15 story building after being hit by Israeli airstrikes on Gaza City, Thursday, May 13, 2021. (AP Photo/Khalil Hamra)

After summoning 7,000 army troops to occupied territories it bombarded with airstrikes for several days, the Israeli Defense Forces announced in a May 13 Tweet that: “IDF air and ground troops are currently attacking in the Gaza Strip.”

Mr. Netanyahu told Israeli security officials late May 17 that Israel would “continue to strike terror targets” in Gaza “as long as necessary in order to return calm and security to all Israeli citizens.”

The troop buildup is comparable to the 2014 Gaza War that killed an estimated 2,100 Palestinians, mostly civilians.

A Palestinian relative mourns over the bodies of four brothers from the Tanani family who were found under the rubble of a destroyed house following Israeli airstrikes in Beit Lahiya, northern Gaza Strip, Friday, May 14, 2021. (AP Photo/Khalil Hamra)

Loud warning sirens blared into the night sky where rocket launches and counter launches gripped cities. People ran for cover and children frantically screamed in terror of the uncertain situation. Other shocking images on May 10 showed Palestinians under attack by Israeli security forces inside the Al-Aqsa Mosque, the third most sacred site of Islam. Israeli forces stormed the mosque interior firing tear gas and stun grenades and wounding 300 peaceful worshippers gathered for prayers during the Muslim fast and holy month of Ramadan.

According to several media reports, the Israelis have refused assistance from outside mediators. With this latest explosion of conflict with Israeli atrocities against Palestinians once again being thrust front and center before the world, the question many have is, where will this end?

Protestors in Chicago May 12 demand justice for Palestinians and end to assaults by Jewish military and Israelis

According to the Honorable Minister Louis Farrakhan, his teacher, the Most Honorable Elijah Muhammad warned global war was on the horizon, sparked by conflict in the Middle East. He warned America, the world’s greatest superpower, will be forced out of the region. If America is forced out what hope does Israel have to survive? Will there be blood? “Plenty,” warned the patriarch of the Nation of Islam.

Where did this current crisis begin?

“One aspect of the current crisis began with the attack on the Al-Aqsa Mosque toward the end of Ramadan,” said Phyllis Bennis, political analyst, and commentator in a telephone interview with The Final Call.

However, the attack was preceded weeks earlier, when Israeli police blocked a long-standing Palestinian tradition of breaking the daily fast with their families on the grounds of the site. This caused anger, which the Israelis responded to using non-state actors to attack Palestinians and chant “death to the Arabs.”

The brazen defiling of Al-Aqsa compounded age-old disputes concerning access to the holy site, revered by Muslims, Jews, and Christians alike.

“All of that was rooted in a very heightened level of anger and tension across Jerusalem because of the escalation in recent months of house demolitions and evictions … that have been underway … for several years,” said Ms. Bennis.
 
Pro-Palestinian demonstrators gather in Chicago to show support amid reports that Israeli forces have launched attacks in the occupied territories.
Photo: Haroon Rajaee


Palestinians were protesting active efforts by Jewish settlers to displace Palestinian families from the Sheikh Jarrah community in occupied east Jerusalem.

Violence erupted over a May 2 Israeli court decision ordering six Palestinian families to vacate their homes to make way for Jewish settlers. The Jerusalem District Court rendered the rule, although the families resided there for generations. Many Palestinians are threatened with imminent dispossession from their homes.

Resistance to displacements could be understood in Sheikh Jarrah history. The community was established by 28 Palestinian refugee families displaced from other occupied areas in the mid-1950s. East Jerusalem was under the mandate of Jordan at the time until 1967 when it became occupied by Israel.

The fundamental problem is one of subjugation and occupation after the UN granted European Jews, Palestinian lands in 1948. There has been friction ever since, with no apparent end in sight.

Like Indigenous people throughout the world, the Palestinian people demand a life of dignity, sovereignty and self-determination, argued The Black Alliance for Peace in a May 17 press release linking the plight of the Palestinians to African liberation. “As Black internationalists, we will always be in solidarity with the Palestinian people as they struggle against U.S. imperialism and Zionist settler-colonialism,” the statement read in part.

Crowd marches through downtown streets of Chicago in opposition to Israeli assaults on Palestinians Photo James G Muhammad

Palestinians determined enough is enough, because the “dispossession just keeps on happening,” said Khury Petersen-Smith, the Michael Ratner Middle East Fellow at the Institute for Policy Studies.

Mr. Petersen-Smith told The Final Call, the current crisis is also rooted in the creation of Israel replete with aggression and encroachment of Palestinian land going back generations.

“This is fundamentally about power, and historical injustices that continues,” said Mr. Petersen-Smith.

Those injustices involved forcing the Palestinian people into a marginalized second-class citizenship with curtailed rights. It’s not a conflict between two sides and one side happens to have bigger guns, stated Mr. Petersen-Smith. “One side is the occupier, and one side is the occupied,” he said.

Years of brutality, aggression, and heavy-handed rule that analysts described as apartheid against the Palestinian people has worsened.

America’s role and global reactions to a growing crisis

The White House said, in a telephone call with Mr. Netanyahu, Mr. Biden condemned the rocket attacks by “Hamas and other terrorist groups,” including against Jerusalem and Tel Aviv. The official Whitehouse press release said, Mr. Biden conveyed his “unwavering support for Israel’s security” and for “Israel’s legitimate right to defend itself” and its people.

However, several U.S. lawmakers rebuked the Israeli attacks and illegal displacement effort in Sheikh Jarrah. In Washington, D.C., Rep. Rashida Tlaib (D-Mich.) and Rep. André Carson (D-Ind.) joined a pro-Palestinian protest outside the U.S. State Department organized by the Council on American-Islamic Relations (CAIR) and American Muslims for Palestine.

In a separate joint statement as the only three Muslims in Congress, Reps. Carson, Tliab and Ilhan Omar (D-Minn.) condemned the assault on the Al-Aqsa Mosque, the displacement efforts and spiraling courses of events in the occupied territories. They raised the duplicity of U.S. unwavering support of Israel, in the face of its contrary actions.

“We continue to provide the Israeli government with over $3 billion in military aid every year—with no conditions or accountability for wanton human rights abuses and continuing illegal seizures of Palestinian land,” their statement read.

“For decades, we have paid lip service to a Palestinian state, while land seizures, settlement expansion, and forced displacement continue, making a future home for Palestinians more and more out of reach. It is long past time we finally take action to protect Palestinian human rights and save lives,” the statement continued.

In response to Mr. Biden’s echoing the standard phrase that “Israel has the right to defend itself,” New York Rep. Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez (D) blasted the president’s statement as meaningless.

“Blanket statements like these [with] little context or acknowledgement of what precipitated this cycle of violence—namely, the expulsions of Palestinians and attacks on Al Aqsa —dehumanize Palestinians [and] imply the US will look the other way at human rights violations,” she tweeted May 12. “It’s wrong,” she added,

Rep. Ocasio-Cortez said: “naming Hamas’ actions—which are condemnable and refusing to acknowledge the rights of Palestinians,” Mr. Biden “reinforces the false idea” that Palestinians instigated this cycle of violence.

“This is not neutral language,” she argued. “It takes a side—the side of occupation.”

There is a growing backlash against America’s “go to narrative” on Israel’s right to defend itself. People are asking the Biden administration, “do the Palestinians have the same right?”

Turkey, which has been calling on the international community to stop Israeli aggression, condemned the U.S. characterizing the crisis as Israeli self-defense.

At the UN headquarters in New York, the Security Council held an emergency session on the crisis, where the U.S. was the sole holdout blocking a joint statement to demand a cessation of violence.

It remains to be seen what actions the Biden administration will take in the matter. Israel enjoys unyielding bipartisan support in the U.S. Congress and is the largest recipient of annual foreign and military aid. Besides military support, historically the U.S. has provided protection, material support, and diplomatic cover. At the UN, the U.S. spared no opportunity to use its veto power to quash any measure of accountability of the Jewish state.

The Palestinian Authority said silence at the UN and blaming the victim is a blind policy that does not reveal the truth.

“Silence towards Israel’s crimes encourages it to continue attacking our people. Failure to condemn Israel in the UN gives it the green light to commit more crimes,” said Dr. Mohammad Shtayyeh, Palestinian prime minister.

International and regional organizations also condemned the clashes. In a statement, the UN Secretary-General Antonio Guterres expressed “deep concern” over continuing violence in occupied East Jerusalem and called on both sides to exercise maximum restraint.

De-escalation of the Palestine-Israel conflict is “an absolute must,” said the Mr. Guterres on May 12, declaring that the mounting death toll, including children, was totally unacceptable.

In a tweet the same day, Tor Wennesland, UN Special Coordinator for the Middle East Peace Process said the “fire” must stop immediately.

“We’re escalating towards a full-scale war. Leaders on all sides have to take the responsibility of de-escalation,” Mr. Wennesland of Norway wrote. “The cost of war in Gaza is devastating and is being paid by ordinary people,” he added.

The special envoy said the UN is working with all sides of the problem to restore calm. However, observers of problem of occupied Palestine have told The Final Call that the UN has been an ineffective institution because of Israel being under the protection of powers like the U.S. and others on the UN Security Council.

Mr. Wennesland has been meeting behind closed doors with the Security Council where no unified statement has yet to come forth. Mr. Wennesland reminded council members that it is the civilian population on both sides, that bears the burden of war and that the most vulnerable are the ones at greatest risk of suffering.

He also told the council that the cycle of violence would only end with a political resolution of the conflict, an end to the occupation and a realization of a two-State solution on the basis of UN resolutions, with Jerusalem as the capital of both States.

The Arab League which was at odds with Palestinian Authority leaders who accused league members of abandoning their cause when the League signed normalization agreements with Israel with the U.S. brokered Abraham Accords, condemned Israel’s aggression.

“Israeli violations in Jerusalem, and the government’s tolerance of Jewish extremists hostile to Palestinians and Arabs, is what led to the ignition of the situation in this dangerous way,” said its chairman Ahmed Aboul Gheit before an emergency summit on the issue.

The head of the Organization of Islamic Cooperation (OIC), which held an urgent meeting in Jeddah, “praised the steadfastness of the Palestinian people stationed in the occupied city of Jerusalem and their response to the Israeli attacks on the holy sites,” Saudi state agency SPA reported.

Worldwide Palestinian solidarity grows

Pro-Palestinian solidarity is growing worldwide in condemnation of the ongoing Israeli aggression. The anti-war A.N.S.W.E.R. Coalition website listed over 50 U.S. cities where solidarity rallies were organized by different organizations. Globally from London to Karachi and Rabbat, people demonstrated. Mr. Petersen-Smith said there is rising dissatisfaction with Israel, internationally and in America.

“What Israel does to the Palestinians…is so unmistakably colonial in the eyes of so many people around the world,” he said.

There is a kind of indignation redolent to the global reaction to the George Floyd killing by a White Minneapolis cop. There is a struggle playing out within the Democratic party about what is the progressive direction of America.

“Palestine is a key issue,” he said. “It is the main issue when it comes to what a progressive foreign policy looks like,” he added, explaining the divide and pushback directed at the Biden administration response to the turmoil.

Although there are more people in Congress now, willing to criticize Israel and U.S. aid to Israel, Mr. Petersen-Smith is doubtful policy changes would be easy.

On the movement side in the streets, the conversation is ahead of the government on the Israeli-Palestinian issue. So, even though the issue is nearly 80 years old, the crisis is happening in a time of a social and political shift favorable toward the oppressed Palestinians. This is not the first time Israel had an episode of naked violence.

“We say to our Palestinian Brothers and Sisters—our family—we stand in solidarity with you and hold on to the rope of Allah, all together and be not disunited,” said Student Minister Ishmael Muhammad, national assistant to Min. Farrakhan. “This injustice will be met by the justice that only God can give,” he said.

Student Minister Muhammad expressed support for the Palestinians in May 16 remarks at Mosque Maryam, the Nation of Islam’s Chicago headquarters. (Associated Press contributed to this report.)
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From The Final Call Newspaper

The Criterion (Standard) of Love & Leadership

By Demetric Muhammad, Guest Columnist
- May 11, 2021





Reflections On The Significance of Minister Farrakhan’s 88th Birth Anniversary

“Blessed is He who sent down the Criterion upon His Servant that he may be to the worlds a warner”
-Holy Qur’an Chapter 25 (al-Furqan) Verse 1

On May 11, 1526, the Spanish monarchy issued forth a formal decree forbidding the importing of Muslims into the Western Hemisphere. According to esteemed scholar Sylvianne Diouf:

“After the first slave uprising in the New World, led by the Wolof in 1522, a royal decree of May 11, 1526, specifically forbade the introduction of ‘Gelofes’ (Wolof), Negros (Blacks) from the Levant (or Middle East), those who had been raised with the Moors, and people from Guinea without a special license from the Casa de Contratación, which regulated the slave trade and put levies on the slaves.

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The Honorable Minister Louis Farrakhan delivered a critical, worldwide message July 4, 2020 titled, “The Criterion.” During the message, the Minister shared divine guidance on the Covid-19 pandemic and issued a warning to Blacks, Latinos and indigenous people about taking the experimental vaccines developed by the U.S. with its history of medical mistreatment and treachery against the darker people of the earth.

All the groups that the decree prohibited were either completely or mostly Muslim. Within fifty years, five decrees were passed to forbid the introduction of African Muslims to the Spanish colonies.

This insistent reissuing of the prohibition shows that Muslims nevertheless continued to arrive and to cause concerns and problems in the New World. The colonists claimed that the Muslims incited the other nations to rebellion, and it was feared that they would take Islam to the Indians.”

It was 407 years later, on May 11, 1933, that a baby boy was born in New York City to parents Sarah Mae Manning and Percival Clark. The baby boy named Louis Eugene Walcott would grow to become known all over the world as the Honorable Minister Louis Farrakhan.

On May 11, 2021, we celebrate and reflect upon the magnificent life and work of Minister Farrakhan. This is the 88th anniversary of his birth, and it is important to look at the life of Minister Farrakhan through the lens of history.
At the age of 80, the Minister lead the FOI into the streets of Chicago to greet residents, help ease tensions in neighborhoods and encourage Black people to strive to make their communities safe and decent places to live.

It is even more important to look at Minister Farrakhan’s life through the lens of prophecy. In truth, it is within the life of Minister Farrakhan wherein we have observed an extraordinary and profound intersection of history, prophecy and current events.

The May 11 historic prohibition against Islam’s entry into the Americas is a component part of the overall enslavement and oppression of Black people throughout the Western Hemisphere, especially in North America. Students of the cyclical nature of historical events bear witness to what the Most Honorable Elijah Muhammad said when he stated that “there is no such thing as a coincidence.”

On this, the 88th anniversary of his birth, we can look at his life and begin to appreciate the fact that the life of Louis Farrakhan is a very significant aspect of Allah’s (God’s) response to Black suffering.
The Honorable Minister Louis Farrakhan speaks during funeral services for DMX

The cornerstone of the Nation of Islam’s theology is that we believe that Allah (God) has heard the cries, the prayers and the woe-filled mourning of the Black man and woman of America, and has intervened in our affairs in the person of Master W. Fard Muhammad. The Bible supports our belief when it states in Exodus 3:7-8:

“And the LORD said, I have surely seen the affliction of my people which are in Egypt, and have heard their cry by reason of their taskmasters; for I know their sorrows; And I am come down to deliver them out of the hand of the Egyptians. …”

As the National Representative of the Most Honorable Elijah Muhammad, Minister Farrakhan has, since 1977, been the foremost in spreading Islam within the Black community as a salvific force that is powerful enough to address and cure the many pathologies that our enslavement and oppression produced among us.



And within this same time period Minister Farrakhan has been the one Black leader that the White power structure has hated the most, and consistently targeted for destruction. This is significant, especially when we consider that there is a fundamental adversarial relationship between the real leaders of the oppressed and the oppressors.

In fact, it can be deemed an indicator of strength and authenticity for a supposed leader of the enslaved to be hated and condemned by the slave masters. And by contrast, those supposed leaders of the oppressed that are approved of and celebrated by the oppressors cannot be the authentic leaders of the oppressed. And these most certainly cannot be a leader that reflects Allah’s (God’s) promised deliverance out of the hand of the oppressors.

In other words, our heroes are not the heroes of our former slave masters and their children.

MMM MLF handraised Haroon Rajaee Oct 16 1995

Leadership

The vicious campaign to discredit and malign the noble name and person of the Honorable Minister Louis Farrakhan for over 35 years identifies him as the standard or criterion of Black leadership that reflects Allah’s (God’s) promise to deliver us. Consider some candid unsolicited statements from critics and observers.


“To a great extent, in other words, Farrakhan now is the black leadership—the cutting edge, the storm center, the presence against which others are measured.” National Review Magazine

“The appearance of Louis Farrakhan at Madison Square Garden on October 7 demonstrated, without doubt that he is now America’s preeminent black leader.” Julius Lester, Journalist & Critic

“Smart and super articulate, Minister Farrakhan is perhaps the best living example of a black man ready, willing and able to ‘tell it like it is’ regarding who is responsible for racism in this country … every black person important enough to be interviewed is asked to condemn Minister Farrakhan… .” Prof. Derrick Bell

“For the first time in African American history; a non-Christian leader is a significant, if not the significant leader within Black America.” Professor Michael Eric Dyson

MLF With Ghadhafi

“I believe Minister Farrakhan is the most important Muslim leader in the world, who can best represent the concerns of the Islamic world to our government. I have spent countless hours with him.” Jude Wanniski, Advisor President Ronald Reagan

Infamous FBI Director, J. Edgar Hoover wrote that he was working to “prevent the rise of a messiah” among Black people. For a leading law enforcement official to invoke religious terminology within his descriptions of his counterintelligence program is strange.
MLF and Jerry Rawlings

Love

It is significant because Messianic leadership brings together in the leader who possesses it, the most desired attributes of both secular and sacred models of leadership. Minister Farrakhan’s life and leadership exemplifies this more than any other public figure. In fact, famous attorney William Kunstler said that in the modern context, Minister Farrakhan is the Messianic Black man that J. Edgar Hoover feared. He noted:

“During his tenure and prior to the murder of Malcolm X, Director Hoover often spoke of the need for preventing the rise in this country of what he called ‘a Black Messiah.’ Today, Minister Farrakhan, in my opinion, would be so considered, placing him in great jeopardy.”

HMLF walks up block

However, far too often examinations and analysis of Minister Farrakhan’s unique and phenomenal life fail to account for his sacred qualities. And I would argue that these hidden aspects of Minister Farrakhan’s character need to be the leading considerations when his life, work and significance to Black people are weighed and measured. So, I close this article with more candid, yet profound testimonies from respected figures within Black America. Their testimonies help sum up the spiritual or sacred side of Minister Farrakhan’s messianic role and leadership of his people.

HMLF and Jesse Jackson

“There is simply no Black person in the world that has—over so many years—been as consistent, as unrestricted, and as forthright in defending the humanity of Black people throughout the world against its attackers.” Prof. Andre C. Willis

“Louis insisted on getting down on his hands and knees on the floor to take my shoes off. You know, I’m overweight, and it’s a difficult task to get shoes and socks off. And so Louis said, ‘I will do that.’ And I said, “No, no.’ And Louis said, ‘No, I want to do it.’ He took my shoes off and rubbed my feet to get the blood circulating.” Prof. C. Eric Lincoln

I said, “Minister let me just be honest with you. I’m broke. SCLC is broke. We don’t have no money. But if you just help me and loan me a few dollars. In terms of my plight of SCLC. I promise you that I will multiply it and I will pay you back.

HMLF and Easu Garner New York Justice or Else

“And the Minister looked at me and he said, ‘My brother, you got my attention.’ He said, ‘Just one thing that I want you to realize. I’m going to give you the money that you asked for because I know you mean well and you are going to do what is right to uplift the organization.’ He said, ‘You must realize you can’t pay me back. You just go and be successful with Dr. King’s organization and make it work for our people and I will be proud and I will commend the fact that you had enough motivation to come all the way to Chicago and to share with me your vision and your strategy.’ ” Rev. Charles Steele, SCLC President

Demetric Muhammad is a Memphis-based Nation of Islam student minister, author and member of the NOI Research Team.
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From The Final Call Newspaper

Ugly America: Rights panel condemns ongoing police genocide against Blacks

By Brian E. Muhammad, Staff Writer
- May 4, 2021




America is touted globally as the land of the free and bastion of democracy. However, a scathing report on pervasive killing of Black people by U.S. law enforcement has exposed America as a major human rights offender and breaker of international law.

The report is the latest effort to hold America accountable for abuses that constitute crimes against humanity and genocide by international standards.

A commission of 12 legal experts from the Caribbean, Africa, Asia, Latin America, and Europe determined that police violence and killing of Black people in the United States are Crimes Against Humanity and clear violations of international law that should be investigated and prosecuted. The expert group was organized by the International Commission of Inquiry on Systemic Racist Police Violence, which is a collective of legal groups.

“The commissioners were often brought to tears when we saw what was happening in the United States of America,” said Bert Samuels, a commissioner, and the deputy head of the Jamaican National Council on Reparations.



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“It was a painful exercise, and we are here to tell the world what is happening in the United States,” he said. Protests against police brutality. Demonstrators kneel outside the Long Beach Police Department in Long Beach, California, during a protest on May 31, 2020. AP Photo/Ashley Landis, File

The panel’s findings were revealed during an April 27 press conference via Zoom. The findings were the results of independent hearings held over four weeks in January and February 2021. The panel examined 44 cases from 33 cities of egregious killings and injury at the hands of U.S. police officers.

The commissioners heard from families, attorneys, and witnesses. They concluded that relevant U.S. laws and police practices doesn’t comply with international human rights obligations.

There is a pattern and practice of racist police violence in the United States that is part of a history of oppression, said the report’s summary.

In case after case, the commissioners found a pattern of “destruction, loss and manipulation” of evidence and “coverups, obstruction of justice, and collusion” between multiple law enforcement agencies in connection with the killings.

They noted that police officers and their unions, prosecutors, coroners and “independent medical examiners” are accomplices in police impunity. The report also found a pattern of creating false narratives and smear campaigns directed at victims and their families.

The Zoom press conference featured several family members of victims of police killings.

“We have to get bills passed … but there’s no good in passing laws if they are not enforced,” said Gwen Carr, mother of Eric Garner who was killed by a White New York police officer who administered a prohibited chokehold. Mr. Garner pleaded, “I can’t breathe” in a video seen worldwide in 2014.

Protests against police brutality have been taking place in cities across the United States including New York City. Photo: UN News/Shirin Yaseen

Ms. Carr has been involved in similar cases since her tragedy and called on rights advocates to stay vigilant. “Because when we take one step forward, it seems they push us two steps back,” she said.

“I thank the commission for recognizing my humanity as a good Black man in America, and for recognizing my brother George Floyd’s humanity and the humanity of other families across this nation,” said Philonise Floyd. He commended the group for convening and bringing to light how the United States government is perpetrating crimes against humanity.

The George Floyd killing was by many seen as a “public execution” as camera phone video went viral of former police officer Derek Chauvin suffocating Mr. Floyd to death in nine minutes of torture on a Minneapolis street.

The killing of Mr. Floyd sparked a level of worldwide interest in the plight of Blacks in America. As “horrific and egregious” as the police killings being currently witnessed, even after George Floyd’s killing, only a miniscule number are reported because the U.S federal government doesn’t track this data, said Collette Flanagan, founder of Mothers against Police Brutality.

Her only son Clinton Alexander, 25, was shot to death by a Dallas police officer in March 2013 while unarmed. He was shot once in the arm, five times in the chest, and once in the back, she said.

Andrew Brown, Jr., protests in Graham, North Carolina. Mr. Brown was fatally shot by sheriff’s deputies April 21 in Elizabeth City, N.C. Photo: MGN Online


“In fact, there is a Derek Chauvin in every police department, and some have many,” she said, referring to the convicted cop killer of Mr. Floyd. “We know by the evidence of the many killings of Black men and women, which is almost a daily occurrence.”

Ms. Flanagan said the U.S. has a culture of “systemic racism” that is “deeply seeded and rooted” in police departments. She refutes a common argument that cops involved in infractions are merely a few bad apples.

“We are way past a few bad apples,” she said. “We are into orchards of bad apples with trees that have diseased roots … tainted with racism and White supremacists … bearing rotten fruit,” she said.

The police killing and maiming of Black life every year is indicative of the stain of systemic racism and the disease of White supremacy woven in the fabric of America from its inception. The violence dates back to the extermination of Native Americans, slavery, and the militarization of U.S. society, which continues today.

Ms. Flanagan echoed a call for the UN Human Rights Council to support the independent review of the International Commission of Inquiry into police killings.

“I strongly believe that a robust international accountability mechanism would further support and compliment—not undermine—efforts to dismantle systemic racism in the United States including by the Biden administration,” she stated.

The commission intends to pressure President Biden and the U.S. Congress to listen to the voices of the victims of police crimes as reflected in the recommendations of the 188-page report. The group wants the International Criminal Court to launch an investigation against the U.S. for crimes against humanity. However, the U.S. is not a signatory of the Rome Statute that established the court and has historically obstructed any attempt by the ICC to hold the U.S. accountable for any violations.

The report recommends that the U.S. government acknowledge the Trans-Atlantic Slave Trade, slavery, colonization and colonialism were Crimes against Humanity and past injustices and crimes against Black people in the U.S. must be addressed with reparatory justice.

Photo: MGN Online

But questions loom as to how Washington would respond to the independent international inquiry.

Judge Peter Herbert of the United Kingdom, one of the commissioners, believes the Biden administration would be more amicable to the discussion, compared to the previous President Donald Trump.

He also believes public sentiment is leaning toward change, citing global reaction to George Floyd’s murder with mass demonstrations not seen since the antiwar protests of the 1960s.

“Young people all across the globe did immense damage to the United States reputation,” said Judge Hurbert.

Judge Hurbert raised the possibility of global boycotts of American products as was done to topple White minority rule in South Africa.

U.S. fought international scrutiny

“I completely agree with the findings and recommendations of the International Commission of Inquiry,” said Roger Wareham, a human rights attorney with the International Secretariat of the New York-based December 12th Movement.

“I think that it is a timely exposé on the international level of the crimes committed by the U.S., currently and historically,” he told The Final Call.

The inquiry was organized by the commission in conjunction with a mandate from the United Nations Human Rights Council for a report on systemic racism, and violations of international human rights law against Blacks by law enforcement agencies globally. The mandate was the result of a global uprising after the killing of Mr. Floyd.

The issue of “blue on Black” violence was taken to world bodies for support and justice. The families of Mr. Floyd, and other police victims like Breonna Taylor, Michael Brown and Philando Castile and 600 rights groups petitioned the Human Rights Council to appoint a “UN Commission of Inquiry” to investigate systemic police violence.

In June 2020, the Human Rights Council strongly condemned “the continuing racially discriminatory and violent practices perpetrated by law enforcement agencies against Africans and people of African descent.” In particular, the council noted the death of Mr. Floyd and other U.S. Blacks.

However, the council caved in under U.S. bully tactics to stop the forming of a special UN Commission. It directed its High Commissioner, Michelle Bachelet, to prepare a report by June 2021 on systemic racism by law enforcement on Blacks in America and globally, which lawyers argue was a compromise to diminish a specific focus on U.S. violations.

“The United States fought tooth and nail not to have an international commission,” said Attorney Lennox Hines, the coordinator of the commission. “And instead argued that the problem is a global problem … to deflect any particular focus on the United States.”

The “International Commission of Inquiry on Systemic Racist Police Violence Against People of African Descent in the United States” was formed by the International Association of Democratic Lawyers, along with the National Conference of Black Lawyers, and the National Lawyers Guild to independently investigate if widespread police “killings and maiming” of Blacks continue as a pattern of U.S. violations of human rights and fundamental freedoms.

America: A recalcitrant offender

The global impact of the George Floyd murder was a black eye on America’s own carefully crafted international image. The U.S. holds an outsized influence, in the amount of money it gives at the UN and its ability to pressure nations to bow to its will, commissioners conceded. They expressed no illusions about the U.S, ability to wield power to counter the report and blunt calls for action.

But, they were optimistic when answering a Final Call question on how to counter U.S. efforts to avoid accountability.

“The comment on the United States outsized role at the United Nations is accurate,” said Atty Hinds. “However, we have to utilize it in contradictions that exist.”

He said political dynamics are changing at the United Nations with Kenya assuming the rotating presidency of the Security Council later this year and other potential advantages. Atty. Hines said plans are underway to mobilize the African Union, which made an initial appeal to the Human Rights Council to take up the issue of police victimization of U.S. Blacks.

“We are going to mobilize within the continent of Africa, including in Kenya, to bring pressure upon the African Union, so that they in turn will be able to put pressure on the Security Council and on the Human Rights Council,” Atty. Hines told The Final Call.

“This is not going to be an easy task,” he admitted.

However, commissioners expressed optimism about getting international support with a report featuring concrete findings, bolstered by the expertise, reputation, and impartiality of the 12 international experts.

The report on U.S. violations comes at a time of an intensifying universal cry for justice from the masses of people worldwide against state repression and rights violations by their own governments.

As brutal treatment by law enforcement is documented and independently exposed through camera phones and spread virally, world condemnation of violations is more frequent and America can no longer skirt the issue, said commission members.

The commissioners concluded that the use of force against unarmed Blacks is motivated by racial stereotypes and biases resulting in targeting Black and Brown people for questioning, arrests, and detention.

The report summary said U.S. law enforcement officers operate on predetermined “racist associations between Blackness and criminality.”

In 43 cases, the commissioners found disproportionate use of excessive force by police led to the deaths of the victims. The unlawful force included shootings, restraints and tasers and is part of an alarming, national pattern, said commissioners.

America is a killing field, considering that in 2020 more than 1,100 people were killed by police, with Blacks killed more than twice the rate of others. Statistics show Blacks are 3.5 times more likely than Whites to be killed by police when not attacking or unarmed.

Currently one out of every 1,000 Black men can expect to succumb to police violence over the course of his life, which is a number 2.5 times the same for White men, said the report.

Black women are not spared from extrajudicial killings. They are 1.4 times more likely to die in this manner than White females. The war on drugs is a significant driver of police violence against Black women and girls. Numerous studies have concluded that Black women are excessively subjected to “pretextual traffic stops,” a law enforcement tactic otherwise known as racial profiling.

Black immigrants abused in America

Commissioners also noted, as outsiders looking into the U.S., that immigrants from the Caribbean and Africa suffered the same fates as Blacks at the hands of U.S. police.

The report said Black immigrants are not safe and subjected to losing their lives while Black.

These realities crush the myth of America as the exceptional land of the free. The numbers of Black immigrants killed by law enforcement raises a challenge that America has yet to address, systemic criminalization of Black life.

Alfred Olango, a 38-year-old Ugandan refugee who was shot and killed by police in California in 2016 and David Felix, a 24-year-old Haitian immigrant killed by N.Y. police in 2015 are examples.

An infamous case was the September 2018 killing of 26-year-old accountant Botham Jean from St. Lucia in his own apartment by off-duty Dallas Police officer Amber Guyger. Lawyers for the jailed ex-cop filed an appeal on April 27 to overturn her 10-year sentence.

A long history of efforts on the world stage

Today’s effort by the commission is not the first time police infractions and killings of Blacks were brought to the United Nations or its Human Rights Commission.

“It continues a century long tradition of Black people taking our situation to the international arena,” Mr. Wareham explained.

After the brutal 2014 police slaying of 18-year-old Michael Brown, Jr., in Ferguson, Missouri, and vigilante killing of Trayvon Martin in Florida, a delegation of activists and families presented before a UN panel in Geneva, Switzerland, documenting their concerns about U.S. compliance with the Convention on the Elimination of All Forms of Racial Discrimination treaty.

Concerning police violence, UN spokesperson Stéphane Dujarric reiterated the UN’s stance, calling for thorough investigations.

“We’ve always said that police forces around the world need to have adequate human rights training,” she said.

For Black America, heavy handed repression from law enforcement has remained a reality.

There were efforts to different efforts to internationalize the plight of U.S. Blacks at different times in history.

In December 1951, actor/activist Paul Robeson and William Patterson submitted a petition from the Civil Rights Congress to the United Nations. The petition was titled, “We Charge Genocide: The Crime of Government Against the Negro People.” The petition was signed by nearly 100 U.S. intellectuals and activists including Dr. W.E.B. DuBois.

Police brutality was a central issue in the petition that charged the U.S. government with committing “genocide” against Blacks in violation of the UN Genocide Convention.

“To many an American the police are the government, certainly its most visible representative,” the petition read.

“We submit that the evidence suggests that the killing of Negroes has become police policy in the United States and that police policy is the most practical expression of government policy,” it said. The petition characterized police violence as a new form of lynching.

Although America has worked hard to conceal the reality, Black America fits the legal definition of genocide. The word “genocide” was first coined by Polish lawyer Raphäel Lemkin in 1944. It consists of the Greek prefix genos, meaning race or tribe, and the Latin suffix cide, meaning killing. Genocide was first recognized as a crime under international law in 1946 by the United Nations General Assembly and codified as an independent crime in the 1948 “Convention on the Prevention and Punishment of the Crime of Genocide.”

Based on the current convention Black people fall under an intent to destroy, in whole or in part, a national, ethnical, racial or religious group through “killing members of the group; and “causing serious bodily or mental harm” to members of the group, argued advocates for charging the United States.

Make America know her sins

Longtime activists see the growing attention on American police violence as a win.

“In this globalized world we live in … all these things are intertwined in that we can have allies in our struggle and the international community can be our allies,” stated Mr. Wareham.

Commission leaders said the report’s objective is to hold the U.S. accountable by the international community.

“I think the idea of commissioners being outside the United States makes it very difficult for the U.S. to hide from the recommendations,” said Bert Samuels, commission member and attorney from Jamaica.

He said the U.S. regularly steps to other nations about rights abuses and extrajudicial killings. “We are used to the United States looking at our countries, so now that we are looking into the U.S., we are hoping that as outsiders making these recommendations, we will be seen to be objective and that help will come to the United States,” said Mr. Samuels.
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FARRAKHAN FILES DEFAMATION LAWSUIT AGAINST THE ADL

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Farrakhan on neo-cons, Iraq and the war on terror

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