|
WSWS : News
& Analysis : North
America : The
Brutal Society
Thousands protest police violence in New York City
By Steve Light
8 April 2000
Use
this version to print
In the face of growing police violence and the firm backing
of the police by New York City's Mayor Rudolph Giuliani, several
thousand people marched April 5 in Manhattan from Union Square
to City Hall to demand justice for the victims of the official
brutality.
As has been the case in a number of recent protests, the presence
of enthusiastic groups of high school and college students in
the racially-mixed crowd was noticeable. The most striking aspect
of the rally was the half-dozen or more relatives of individuals
killed by police who spoke. This reflects the increasing number
of unarmed youth and workers who have been shot down by the police.
These family members were of several ethnic groups: African-American,
Hispanic and Asian. Several of the relatives broke down crying
while they spoke at the rally.
One mother said, They killed my son Manuel in Crown Heights.
Mayor Giuliani doesn't want to do anything. They are the KKK.
One [the police] has a uniform, and the others [KKK] don't.
A young Asian woman cried, My brother was shot in the
back of the head on March 24, 1995. If it happened to my brother,
it could happen to anyone.
The African-American mother of a 21-year old killed in South
Brooklyn raged that he was not shot in the stomach and chest
like they said. He was shot in the back from five feet away. That
was shown by the autopsy report. Not only did they kill him, they
killed me, my family. I feel like my life is over. I have grandchildren
and I want them to safely walk the streets. Get Giuliani out of
there.
Theresa spoke about her son, Jose Miguel Sanchez, a Dominican
immigrant father of 12 children, who was killed at the restaurant
in which he was working. He wanted to see what was happening.
Police would not identify themselves. The officer involved was
never indicted. He is walking the same streets now that Sanchez'
children are walking.
The mother of Anthony Rosario tearfully spoke: First
it was the KKK. Now they are lynched by the police14 shots
in the back while lying down. I called Giuliani to confront him.
This was no shoot-out. This was an execution. She then led
the crowd at the rally in a chant of Giuliani must go.
Tasheem Brown, another speaker and the father of Kevin Brown,
who was one of two youth shot last Friday in the Bushwick section
of Brooklyn, told this reporter:
Police are starting to hold court in the streets. For
the past couple of weeks, this is what's been happening. mostly
to minorities. I am going to see justice is served for my son.
Whatever they say doesn't justify killing kids. They just shut
and closed the case; no investigation pursued. [Police] Commissioner
Safir has the nerve to call it a good shooting.' His kids,
the cops' kids, are not being killed.
Several times during the rally announcements were made about
arrests of marchers who tried to shut down the Brooklyn Bridge
to auto traffic. It was later announced that 18 people had been
arrested in the civil disobedience, including a couple of supporters
who were only observing the arrests. People with cameras were
not allowed to film the arrests. A speaker warned, We know
what can happen, what the police can do when there are no witnesses.
The rally was asked to join a later march to the police precinct
where those arrested would be held.
The rally organizers advanced no viable political basis on
which police brutality could be combated. At an earlier press
conference, Reverend Al Sharpton proposed that people protest
by refusing to shop for Easter. A leaflet handed out at the rally
called for people to withdraw their money from their current banks
and put it in Carver Federal Savings Bank, a Black controlled
bank.
This sort of nationalist demagogy serves the material interests
of a thin layer of black middle class and business people. Sharpton
is a Democratic Party operative and his activity is aimed at diverting
attention from the need to build an alternative to both big business
parties. New York City is characterized by a massive gulf between
the very wealthy and nearly everyone else. In the final analysis,
it is this social gap that is maintained by the the thin
blue line and guarantees the increase in police violence.
See Also:
Class justice in New York:
Why the DA failed to aggressively prosecute the cops who killed
Diallo
[31 March 2000]
The killing of Patrick Dorismond:
New York police violence escalates in wake of Diallo verdict
[22 March 2000]
The Abner Louima case: three
New York cops guilty in cover-up of torture
[9 March 2000]
Top of page
The WSWS invites your comments.
Copyright 1998-2008
World Socialist Web Site
All rights reserved |