For Immediate Release .. .. .. .. .. January 14,, 2009
Reference: Armael Malinis, Chair Anak Bayan East Bay, email: globalizejustice@gmail.com 510.759.6540
FROM CALIFORNIA TO NEW YORK, PROGRESSIVE FIL-AM YOUTH DENOUNCE POLICE BRUTALITY
Anakbayan
chapters nationwide express our solidarity with the family and friends
of Oscar Grant in their struggle for justice. We strongly condemn this
escalating trend of systemic racial profiling and police brutality that
too often results in murder.
Oscar Grant and three other young men were snatched off the BART
train on the Fruitvale Station in Oakland, California on January 1,
2009. They were sitting against the wall when officers pressed Grant
face and belly down on the floor. Then, officer Johannes Mehserle stood
up and drew his firearm and shot Oscar Grant in the back, execution
style right in front of train passengers. The incident
was captured by BART passengers from their cell phone cameras and has
been circulated around the internet for thousands to view. A
week passed and Mehserle remained unaccountable to the City of Oakland
and Bart officials for the heinous murder of Oscar Grant. This
incident indicates how these ill-trained police officers, unfit to
serve and protect the people, go on a rampage with impunity. Oscar
Grant is not alone. Countless more people of color have been brutalized
or murdered by the police force across the country in a decades long
government attempt to maintain state power by dividing and violently
repressing the efforts of people of color to survive and organize.
In
2007 in Oakland, CA, three Southeast Asian youth were wrongfully
accused of murder in the nearby city of Alameda, CA. The police
terrorized the entire Southeast Asian Oakland community by pulling high
school students out of schools without parents consent and bringing in
SWAT teams with automatic rifles looking for suspects at a youth
leadership meeting. The Alameda Police Department
wrongfully classified the 3 youth as gang members for dressing in black
to mourn the death of soldiers during an anti-war mobilization from the
student's myspace page. On Feb 5, 2007 in San Jose, CA, eight
police officers participated in the beating of Marlo Custodio, an 18
year old Filipino student, while two other officers observed and did
not interfere. Marlo Custodio was a senior at Evergreen Valley High School, who was very involved in his community and school programs.
In
Seattle, there has been increasing amounts of police brutality towards
youth leading to several investigations into the police department.
One such case was the shooting of an unarmed 13-year old Filipino youth
in October 2007, mistaking a cell phone for a weapon. Many other cases
exist of excessive force by plain-clothes police who do not identify
themselves and physically attack suspected gang members. Several of
these cases were recorded by cell phones or cameras exonerating the
victims of any wrongdoing and showing the brutal and dehumanizing
tactics of the Seattle PD.
In
New York and New Jersey, Alan Alda, an Anakbayan member was arrested
and detained by Jersey City police after seeking their help against an
erring cab driver on February 18, 2006. Just a few months later, on November 25, 2006,
the horrific murder of Sean Bell happened. The unarmed Bell was shot
fifty times by plainclothes and undercover NYPD officers on the day of
his wedding. Also, on January 11, 2009, with the huge protests against
the unjust invasion of Palestine by the US-backed Israel, 120
pro-Palestinian demonstrators were brutally arrested.
We
recognize police brutality as the domestic manifestation of the
U.S.-led wars throughout the third world perpetrated against the vast
majority of people in an effort to maintain U.S. imperialism. Police
and military violence against innocent youth has plagued the
Philippines from the dawn of the 70's through the present time under
President Gloria Macapagal Arroyo. As the state-sponsored terrorism was
escalating in the 1960's and 70's, the youth responded with massive
street movements that broke the climate of fear instilled by the Marcos
regime. This huge protest movement became known as the First Quarter
Storm. This set the stage for EDSA People Power in 1986 which ousted
Marcos and showed the collective strength of the youth together with
the basic sectors of society. From 2001-2008, 18 youth
leaders of Anakbayan and the League of Filipino Students in the
Philippines have been gunned down just for exercising their right to
speak out against the human rights abuses of the U.S.-backed and U.S.
taxpayer funded Arroyo regime. Despite the terroristic
tactics employed by the state, the youth refuse to be silenced and
continue fighting for justice to this day.
Now,
more than ever, the collective strength of the youth is beckoned once
again. In a time of great economic depression, proliferation of fear
and injustice, and heightened levels of state repression, the youth
need to come together, flex our power, expose state attacks on our
human rights and demand accountability of the police force to the
people.
JUSTICE FOR OSCAR GRANT AND ALL VICTIMS OF RACIAL PROFILING AND POLICE BRUTALITY!
LONG LIVE THE COLLECTIVE POWER OF THE YOUTH!
END GOVERNMENT SPONSORED MURDER FROM THE GHETTOS OF OAKLAND TO PALESTINE!