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WSWS : News
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Release of last protesters arrested during Republican convention
By Tom Bishop
18 August 2000
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On August 15 the last of more than 450 protesters arrested
during the Republican National Convention (RNC) were released
from Philadelphia jails. Most were arrested either committing
acts of civil disobedience to protest capital punishment in the
US or during a police raid on a warehouse where about 80 people
were preparing signs, banners and puppets for demonstrations.
At a press conference Tuesday evening, R2K Legal and Medical,
which aided protesters with legal and medical concerns during
the convention, released an updated list of physical and mental
abuse to which they assert police subjected demonstrators during
their incarceration. They listed 188 counts of excessive force,
15 counts of sexual abuse, 67 counts of denial of medical needs
and 25 counts of mental abuse. The Independent Media Center reports
that when a demonstrator asked one guard why their civil rights
were being violated the latter responded, We do it our own
way.
The released protesters have also issued a set of 15 demands
from the general prison population and statements about the treatment
of these prisoners. The demands include honoring the right to
a speedy trial, prompt medical and dental attention, decent food,
an end to overcrowding, an end to abuse by guards, reliable phone
service, prompt credit of monies sent from outside, genuine rehabilitation
programs, adequate law libraries and prenatal care for pregnant
women.
The R2K press conference was moderated by Kate Sorenson, a
leader of ACT UP/Philadelphia, an AIDS activist organization.
After she was arrested while talking on a cell phone, Sorenson
had her bail initially set at $1 million and was charged with
10 felonies. Sorenson denounced presidential candidates Al Gore,
George Bush and the corporate interests that fund them,
who believe that they can pay our cities to beat our citizens.
She said she could not even imagine having to live through what
she experienced in prison on a long-term basis.
Marina Sitrin of the R2K Legal Team explained that the team,
made up of dozens of lawyers who have volunteered from the National
Lawyers Guild and the Center for Constitutional Rights, would
be working to obtain equal treatment for all those arrested and
make sure no one was singled out for punitive sentences. Sitrin
also promised there would be countless civil suits filed
based on brutality, lack of medical needs, denial of due process.
Angus Love, a civil rights attorney, criticized the mainstream
media coverage of the demonstrations, pointing out that peaceful
protests received little coverage. He charged that the profit-driven
media operates by the motto, If it bleeds, it leads.
He said the media focused on isolated incidents of vandalism,
which city officials used as an excuse to justify the outrageous
bail requirements and brutality directed at the protesters. Love
concluded by quoting Benjamin Franklin, He who sacrifices
liberty for security deserves neither.
One of the jailed protesters, Zozera Imaana, spoke of the conditions
she had observed, commenting, You do not know the truth
of America or the reality of its lies until you have been in its
prisons. There is nothing there but black, Latino and poor white
people.
The final speaker was Michael Africa, who was born in jail
to one of the nine members of the MOVE organization imprisoned
since 1978 after 400 Philadelphia police laid siege to their West
Philadelphia home. He was arrested by seven police officers and
thrown into a van during the RNC demonstrations. He said the reaction
to the televised beating of suspect Thomas Jones a few weeks before
the convention made the police careful not to commit acts of brutality
when cameras were around.
Jamie Graham, a legal observer for the National Lawyers Guild,
told the WSWS that those prisoners who were moved into
prison medical blocks had to be monitored by nurses after they
entered the second week of their hunger strike. He added that
in some prisons the officials tried to alienate the arrested demonstrators
from the other prisoners by putting the entire jail on lockdown
and blaming it on the protesters, but the latter reported the
prisoners were not fooled by this and were supportive of what
they were doing.
Graham was arrested himself as he was walking to a vigil for
jailed protesters at the Roundhouse, the police headquarters.
He was trying to photograph a man and woman who were thrown against
the wall as they were being arrested. He noticed the woman was
having an asthma attack. When he put on his legal advisor identification
cap a police officer knocked the camera out of his hand. When
he tried to pick up his camera he was attacked by two police officers.
He had to go to the hospital for cuts he received and then was
held for two and a half days. He was charged with obstructing
a highway, disorderly conduct and failure to disperse.
See Also:
Over 200 Republican Convention protesters
remain in Philadelphia jails
[12 August 2000]
The Brutal
Society: The Death Penalty and Police Brutality
[WSWS Full Coverage]
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