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WSWS : News
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Over 450 arrested during Republican convention in Philadelphia
By Eula Holmes and Tom Bishop
4 August 2000
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Over 450 demonstrators
are being held by the Philadelphia police after rallies, marches
and acts of civil disobedience against the death penalty on Tuesday.
As the Republican National Convention was celebrating Prosperity
with a Purpose several miles away, those arrested were reportedly
being held under harsh and brutal conditions.
Over 400 demonstrators are being held at Philadelphia's police
headquarters known as the Roundhouse. According to the Independent
Media Center (IMC), protesters have told their legal contacts
harrowing stories of beatings, solitary confinement, refusal of
bathroom privileges and denial of medication. Prisoners suffering
from problems such as anxiety, asthma, hemophilia and injuries
incurred during their arrests are not receiving the treatment
they need. Seven witnesses reported seeing a woman dragged down
the hallway, naked and bleeding.
Another 25 people were held at the city's Holmsburg Prison
on Tuesday and Wednesday, a decrepit, turn-of-the-century prison
several miles from their place of arrest. It was closed down in
1995 but reopened for the convention. Jay Hockburg, a legal observer
from the ACLU, described Holmsburg as really horrible, horrible
conditions. I've heard that firsthand from lawyers, very bad conditions.
The Holmsburg prisoners were moved to the Roundhouse on Thursday.
According to the R2K Network, the umbrella group for activists
gathered for the week of convention-related actions, 22 prisoners
are also being held in the 23rd District jail and are being denied
food and medication, and there is no running water in their cells.
They were told their lawyers were not coming when, in fact, their
lawyers were never contacted. Their attorneys were not being allowed
into arraignment hearings. Bails have been reported to range from
$100 to $400,000.
According to IMC, on Wednesday evening police were sweeping
areas of Center City, arresting suspected protesters on sight.
There were multiple reports of unjustified car and pedestrian
stops, often involving intimidation, searches, and occasionally
violence. Police were seen in roving arrest squads in the area
around 16th, 17th, Market and Chestnut in Center City. According
to a report in the Philadelphia Inquirer, roving patrols
of bicycle police, made up of about 25 cops each, were chanting
the protesters' chant as they were being arrested: Who's
streets? Our streets!
Supporters of the jailed demonstrators, varying from dozens
to hundreds at a time, have been holding a round the clock vigil
at the Roundhouse despite adverse weather conditions from thunderstorms
which have caused flooding. A demonstration is planned Friday
to demand their release. Supporters are under constant surveillance
and frequent harassment by police.
The IMC reported that police toilet-papered one of their own
squad cars at the demonstration site, photographed it with the
protesters in the background, and then moved into the park as
if to break up the campsite. However, the stunt seemed designed
simply to intimidate the group, as no arrests were made.
The arrests came on Tuesday during planned actions of civil
disobedience to protest the death penalty and demand the release
of jailed political prisoner Mumia Abu-Jamal. Protesters staged
coordinated acts of civil disobedience by sitting down at six
intersections and access ramps to city freeways. According to
activists, the actions were carried out by isolated cells operating
autonomously but under the coordination of a central, secretly
located dispatch center, using a collection of cell phones and
walkie-talkies. In at least two instances activists surrounded
buses carrying RNC delegates, delaying their trips considerably.
An atmosphere of panic was created before a rally in support
of political prisoner Mumia Abu-Jamal as the police swept the
City Hall area telling store and restaurant owners to lock their
doors and lower gates in preparation for riots in the streets.
The attention of about one thousand participants at the City Hall
rally was drawn to the surrounding streets as sirens wailed from
all directions, helicopters hovered overhead, and several hundred
police in full riot gear and on horseback or bicycles, and others
running to the area in formation, then lined the streets where
hundreds of protesters were sitting and chanting. Protesters were
arrested one by one over several hours as spectators chanted,
The whole world is watching.
According to R2K Network, at other sites police used pepper-spraying,
beatings with batonsleaving at least one activist unconscious
and hospitalizedand carried out arrests of people not committing
civil disobedience who were perceived by police to be leaders.
R2K reported that observers noted that police appeared to single
out people of color for harsher treatment.
At each civil disobedience area, police used knives to cut
through the street protesters' banners and ropes tying protesters
together. One demonstrator, Jamie, who was carrying a 20-foot
red banner reading, Stop the Texas Killing Machine!
told the WSWS: I had wired the banner so that the
police could not cut it. When they tried to they bounced back.
One of the cops who had tried to cut the banner was angry and
tried to grab it. But the way my hand was linked trying to hold
it, I got twisted up in it as he tried to grab it... He ended
up pulling me to the ground as he tried to get the banner. I was
all twisted up in it and trapped. Then I was kicked and beaten
by police and they managed to handcuff me with the banner twisted
among the handcuffs.
Jamie continued, I was really upset by the next thing
they said, It's going limp, Where do you want to take it?
Take its leg. Take its arm.' I wasn't even a person to them. I
was it'... They threw me in the back of the van. As the
van pulled off with me lying in the back, bottles of drinks fell
on me. Then I had trouble breathing from the pepper spray earlier
and my asthma. It was a tight space. When the officer driving
the van got me to the police station and saw my condition, he
decided not to arrest me and took me to the hospital. At the hospital
they told me I had deep contusions and bone bruising, a possible
concussion, throwing up and breathing problems. Jamie's
face was swollen and discolored, and her arms had bruises and
scratches.
An hour before Tuesday's protests began, police raided the
Ministry of Puppetganda, a studio where puppets were
being assembled, trapping over 70 activists inside for about four
hours before arresting everyone. According to the Philadelphia
Inquirer, police claimed to have infiltrated the group and
found information that the warehouse stored weapons and materials
to block roads, although they declined to elaborate
on the details. Protesters said they were doing nothing more than
assembling large puppets for street theater. After obtaining a
search warrant, police arrested the occupants who had been preparing
to bring the large puppets to the demonstrations.
The IMC reported that during the police raid on the warehouse,
neighbors in the area told police, The only ones here breaking
the law are you. The demonstrations and arrests were widely
reported by the Philadelphia news media. Invariably, the reports
praised the police for their restraint and featured video of police
cars with broken windows or overturned trash dumpsters.
See Also:
Death penalty opponents hold press conference
in Philadelphia
[4 August 2000]
City and police prepare for
Republican Convention:
Philadelphia rally demands prosecution of cops for televised beating
[26 July 2000]
Mumia
Abu-Jamal
[WSWS Full Coverage]
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