SPREAD THE INFORMATION

Any information or special reports about various countries may be published with photos/videos on the world blog with bold legit source. All languages ​​are welcome. Mail to lucschrijvers@hotmail.com.

Search for an article in this Worldwide information blog

zondag 6 juli 2014

(en) Canada, Common Cause - Linchpin - Sammy's Legacy: Building a Community Response to Police Impunity By Zoey

On Saturday July 27, 2013, eighteen year old Sammy Yatim, a resident of Toronto, died at 
the hands of the Toronto police. A video of the incident posted to youtube reveals Sammy, 
armed with a small knife and seemingly intoxicated, occupying an empty street car near 
Trinity Bellwoods park surrounded by a group of roughly ten officers. With barely a 
warning, a particularly overzealous cop fired nine shots into Sammy's body; shortly 
thereafter, a second officer tasered him as he lay fatally wounded. A single police 
officer, Constable James Forcillo, has been suspended with pay. According to the Sunshine 
List (a list of public sector employees making over $100,000 per year), James Forcillo's 
annual salary is just under $107,000. Clearly, commitment to one's role as a vendor of 
human misery and suffering doesn't come cheap.

Although in many cases it is perfectly reasonable and indeed necessary for workers to 
fight for and expect to be paid during any work-related suspension, as anarchists we must 
draw a hard line when it comes to agents of state repression, such as police officers and 
prison guards. We also must note the obvious reality that it is extremely unlikely that 
other workers, unionized or not, would enjoy such a privilege were they to be caught on 
camera committing a brazen act of murder. While some online commentators have made the 
argument that the police were just ?doing their job?, the passionate community response 
that has followed quickly on the heels of Sammy's death clearly demonstrates that this 
type of reasoning is at odds with public conceptions of justice and due process.

In an attempt to perpetuate the myth of police accountability, the Special Investigations 
Unit (SIU) has assigned six investigators and two forensic investigators to Sammy's case. 
This is hardly reassuring. Formed largely as a concession to the growing anger and 
mobilization of Toronto's black community during the 1980s?particularly following the 1988 
murder of Lester Donaldson and further influenced by the 1992 ?Yonge Street Riots? that 
erupted following the murder of Raymond Lawrence?the SIU was created as a supposedly 
impartial oversight body as part of a broader shift towards ?community policing? 
initiatives taking place at the time. Largely composed of former law enforcement agents, 
the SIU as an ?impartial body? is beyond woefully inadequate. It is an almost comical 
farce of justice primarily interested in closing ranks and protecting its own. Since its 
inception in 1990, the Toronto Police Services have killed 62 people; the SIU has cleared 
the vast majority of these officers of any wrongdoing?only three have actually served any 
time for their crimes, and none have been convicted of manslaughter, let alone murder.

Perhaps one of the more egregious recent demonstrations of Toronto police impunity took 
place in August 2011. Charles McGillivary?a mentally disabled man who didn't speak?was out 
for a walk with his mother in the Bloor-Christie area of downtown Toronto when cops 
mistook him for a man who ?roughly fit his description?. The ensuing struggle resulted in 
the death of McGillivary, when one of the officers suffocated him by putting too much 
pressure on his back after tackling him to the ground. His panic-stricken mother pleaded 
with the police to stop, only to be told to ?shut up? and back off. When she asked to 
accompany her son in the ambulance to the hospital after he had gone into cardiac arrest, 
the police officers callously suggested that she take a cab. The two cops involved in the 
altercation were cleared by the SIU of any wrongdoing.

It is clear these incidents do not occur in a vacuum, but rather as part of a broader 
context of white supremacy, patriarchy, ableism, and the capitalist system that these 
institutions serve to benefit and reinforce. The ruling class may be persistent in its 
strained attempts to legitimize it's boneheaded defenders of property and capital, which 
are placed, hypocritically, above even the unsubstantial liberal democratic conceptions of 
law and order. But increasingly these armed thugs expose themselves as the charlatans they 
are to a public armed with wifi, camera phones, and in many cases their own lived 
experiences of police oppression and brutality.

The modern police force was not created in response to an endemic of crime, but is instead 
a unique product of capitalist urbanization in North America. In an essay based on his 
book, Our Enemies in Blue, Kristian Williams states that ?[t]he police organization 
allowed the state to establish a constant presence in a wide geographic area and exercise 
routinized control by the use of patrols and other surveillance. Through the same 
organization, the state retained the ability to concentrate its power in the event of a 
riot or other emergency, without having to resort to the use of troops or the maintenance 
of a military presence. [...] With the birth of modern policing, the state acquired a new 
means of controlling the citizenry?one based on its experiences, not only with crime and 
domestic disorder, but with colonialism and slavery as well. If policing was not in its 
inception a totalitarian pursuit, the modern development of the institution has at least 
been a major step in that direction.?

Equipped with a sober understanding of the role that police play in enforcing social 
control, we need to use tragic examples of police brutality such as Sammy's death as a 
fulcrum that re-orients our communities' capacity to resist state repression. Organizing 
against police brutality means understanding the ways in which this violence intersects 
with capitalist endeavours such as gentrification, immigration enforcement and the 
prison-industrial-complex. As anarchists, we see organizing against the police as part of 
a holistic process of building community power outside of the hollow channels of 
representative politics. We must work with those communities most affected by police 
brutality and attempt to educate those who are blinded by the privilege afforded them 
under capitalist society. Sammy Yatim is dead. and nothing we can do will bring him back. 
But together, we can help to ensure that he did not die in vain.

Upcoming events:

August 13
Sammy's Fightback for Justice: Killer Cops off our Streets!
Facebook Event

August 17
Black August: Organize Against Police Violence
Facebook Event

Add new comment
Comments
Maintaining Momentum: Continuing Pressure on Hamilton Police
Permalink Submitted by grok on Fri, 11/01/2013 - 14:13.
The Friday June 14th 2013 protest march in Hamilton against the police murder of Steve 
Mesic -- which 'unexpectedly' intruded-upon the essentially apolitical downtown Hamilton 
'Art Crawl' evening 'scene' -- was quite the success: getting a WHOLE lot more attention 
than such a protest would usually get from the bourgeois mass-media, for that reason. And 
I was assuming that local anarchists would build on the momentum of that action (I expect 
VERY little of the local communists...)

However I see almost NO effort being made to maintain pressure on the Hamilton police 
apparatus subsequently, by anyone other than a few determined and dedicated individuals; 
and I am talking about the building pressure which the pigs now feel, coming from a 
growing number of issues (besides the Mesic murder) being raised at the now-contentious 
'Hamilton Police Services Board' meetings. And that pressure is most immediately being 
felt by the armed bureaucrats and their friends, coming from that same bourgeois corporate 
mass-media (CHCH and The Spec, obviously) -- which these forces usually assume to be mere 
conduits for their propaganda and disinformation. Thus these 'Powers-That-Be' have felt 
the need to move the venue of their usually cozy (and mostly closed-door) monthly meetings 
at Downtown police HQ, to Hamilton City Hall in some attempt to 'handle' and spin further 
developments.

At the last HPSB meeting (the first, subsequently, at City Hall) on Tuesday 2013.10.15 
16:00, there was essentially only ONE lone protester outside the building, demonstrating 
their refusal to even take part in the general sham going on inside the council chambers. 
Needless to say, the effect of pressure felt by anyone inside -- or the bicycle pigs 
outside -- was somewhat minimal.

So perhaps the local Hamilton anarchists -- who so effectively organized the one-off 
protest of police murder in Hamilton last June -- might want to consider leveraging what 
they got out of that undertaking, by showing up outside City Hall on a regular basis, 
starting with the next regularly-scheduled HPSB meeting on Monday 2013.11.18 16:00.

See you there.

--
Build the North America-wide General Strike.
TODO el poder a los consejos y las comunas.
TOUT le pouvoir aux conseils et communes.
ALL power to the councils and communes.

Beware the 'bait & switch' fraud:
"Social Justice" is NOT Socialism

Geen opmerkingen:

Een reactie posten