Free All Political Prisoners –- Including Julian Assange and Chelsea Manning

Glen Ford, BAR executive editor, 13 Feb 2020

Julian Assange and his protégés have made common cause with Black revolutionaries in their zeal to lay bare the dictatorial nature of the omni-pervasive national security state and the sheer, racist barbarity of the U.S. imperial project.

“A huge struggle must be launched to claim the means of human expression.”

All of our fates are entwined with that of Julian Assange, a political prisoner of the global imperial state. Assange, an Australian currently held in solitary confinement in Britain’s Belmarsh prison, faces 175 years behind bars if extradited to the United States, the imperial power whose international crimes and domestic machinations have been severely compromised by Wikileaks, the journalism operation Assange founded.

The United States has many political prisoners, most of them elderly former members of the Black Panther Party whose willingness to resist racist police violence made them supreme enemies of the U.S. state, never to the forgiven. But Assange, and his protégés Edward Snowden, now living in exile in Moscow, and Chelsea Manning (né Bradley Edward Manning), currently imprisoned for refusal to testify against Assange before a grand jury, are cousins in struggle with Jalil Muntaqim , repeatedly denied parole in the 1971 death of two New York City cops, and Sundiata Acoli , comrade-in-arms with exiled Assata Shakur, who will next be eligible for parole in 2032 when he will be 94 years old.

Imperial power has been severely compromised by Wikileaks.”

In a racist society, it is the ferocity of the state’s pursuit and prosecution of dissidents that is the best measure of their contribution to the struggle against oppression. Although, in white supremacist societies, punishment of Black resisters to state power is always more swift and barbaric than for whites, it is the intent and impact of the blows inflicted on the oppressor that should be the basis of solidarity. From that perspective, Julian Assange and his protégés have made common cause with Black revolutionaries in their zeal to lay bare the dictatorial nature of the omni-pervasive national security state and the sheer, racist barbarity of the U.S. imperial project.

Charles Sims Africa was this week released  from a Pennsylvania prison, the youngest of the Move 9 members convicted in the death of a Philadelphia cop in 1978. Two Move family members, Merle and Phil Africa, mysteriously died in prison. In 1985, eleven Move men, women and children were incinerated by helicopter-borne police, along with 62 houses in the block, on orders of the city’s Black mayor. It is inconceivable that white Americans would be subjected to such bestial, unrelenting punishment by the U.S. state – lynching and ceremonial burning is reserved mainly for Black people. But the Move family’s politics is as much environmentalist as it is Black liberationist, and members early on warned that the ever-encroaching electronic political weaponry of the State was designed to subdue and imprison all of society. Similarly, the Black Panther Party made common cause with all peoples that resist U.S. imperial subjugation, and called for a global order of socialism and peace.

“The Move family’s politics is as much environmentalist as it is Black liberationist….”

Free All Political Prisoners –- Including Julian Assange and Chelsea Manning

U.S. Palestinian Community Network honors the life and memory of Dick Reilly, adopted son of Palestine

https://uspcn.org/2020/02/15/uspcn-honors-memory-of-dick-reilly/

USPCN honors the life and memory of Dick Reilly, adopted son of Palestine

A pioneer in the movement for Palestine solidarity in the U.S., Richard “Dick” Reilly passed away of complications from lung cancer on the evening of Tuesday, February 11th, 2020, in his Chicago apartment. He was 67 years old.

Known across the U.S., and even internationally, as one of the core leaders of national formations like the November 29th Coalition and the Palestine Solidarity Committee, Dick dedicated over 40 years of his life to supporting our fight for the liberation of Palestine.

The working class son of Scott Reilly and Catherine Freeman, he gravitated as a young man to join the struggle for workers’ and oppressed people’s rights by organizing for a period with the Industrial Workers of the World. Soon thereafter, he was introduced to the Arab Community Center (commonly known as the Markaz, “Center” in Arabic) and began his lifelong activist passion.

It was the perfect fit. Progressive, social justice-minded Arabs and Palestinians who ran the Markaz uniting with a progressive, social justice-minded Irishman who wanted a united, liberated Ireland and saw in the Palestinian struggle his own.

Last year, USPCN organized an important event, a debka performance by Wishah, one of the top troupes in the Arab World, and there we explained why our institution is a legacy of the Markaz. The solidarity organizations Dick helped found, worked with, and inspired also had the same political affinity with the Markaz, and today’s Palestine solidarity movement is one of his own powerful legacies….

And so, Dick Reilly, after 40+ years of your commitment to us Palestinians, it is time for us to make a commitment of our own: we pledge to the proud Irish Republican our solidarity with you – that we won’t rest until your people are truly liberated in a united Ireland, “when they own everything from the plough to the stars,” as one of your heroes, James Connolly, once proclaimed.

And we also pledge that there will be no rest until your beloved Palestine is free “From the River to the Sea”!

Dick Reilly, ¡PRESENTE!

U.S. Palestinian Community Network (USPCN), February 15, 2020

Wet’suwet’en People

http://unistoten.camp/about/wetsuweten-people/

UNIST’OT’EN – PEOPLE OF THE HEADWATERS

The Unist’ot’en (C’ihlts’ehkhyu / Big Frog Clan) are the original Wet’suwet’en Yintah Wewat Zenli distinct to the lands of the Wet’suwet’en. Over time in Wet’suwet’en History, the other clans developed and were included throughout Wet’suwet’en Territories. The Unis’tot’en are known as the toughest of the Wet’suwet’en as their territories were not only abundant, but the terrain was known to be very treacherous. The Unis’tot’en recent history includes taking action to protect their lands from Lions Gate Metals at their Tacetsohlhen Bin Yintah, and building a cabin and resistance camp at Talbits Kwah at Gosnell Creek and Wedzin Kwah (Morice River which is a tributary to the Skeena and Bulkley River) from seven proposed pipelines from Tar Sands Gigaproject and LNG from the Horn River Basin Fracturing Projects in the Peace River Region….

Wet’suwet’en Hereditary Chiefs, December 2018

Mistrial in Trump admin’s biased case against Venezuelan embassy protectors is win for sovereignty

https://bit.ly/31V3jy2

https://thegrayzone.com/

The Trump administration’s case against Venezuelan embassy protectors was severely biased, but ended up with a hung jury. The mistrial is a victory for sovereignty and democracy, and another failure in the coup attempt.

By Leonardo Flores / CODEPINK

A hung jury in the Donald Trump administration’s case against activists who were arrested protecting Venezuela’s internationally recognized embassy in Washington, DC is being heralded as a major win for sovereignty, amid the US government’s floundering coup attempt against the Chavista government in Caracas.

On February 14, a jury of 12 DC residents were deadlocked over the issue of the embassy defenders, forcing the judge to declare a mistrial — in a blow to the federal government and to a judicial system that had stacked the odds against them.

The embassy defenders — Adrienne Pine, Margaret Flowers, Kevin Zeese, and David Paul — had been accused of “interfering with the protective functions” of the US State Department after they, as part of the Embassy Protection Collective, had spent 37 days in the Venezuelan Embassy in Washington, DC in the spring of 2019, protecting it from an illegal takeover by the US-backed supporters of coup leader Juan Guaidó.

Chief Judge Beryl A. Howell overtly favored the prosecution by severely limiting the scope of the case, ruling that the defendants were limited to speaking only about events between May 13 and May 16.

For context, the Embassy Protection Collective began staying in the building on April 11. All was peaceful until April 30, when coup supporters surrounded the embassy and attacked the protectors with physical and verbal abuse, as well as death threats.

The protectors were then put under a joint siege by the police and coup supporters — the latter of whom did all they could to prevent food from being delivered into the premises. On May 8, the electricity and water were cut off.

On May 13, they subsequently received a trespass “notice” — a piece of paper with no official letterhead, signature or seal that was most likely written in Spanish and translated. They were then asked, but not ordered, to leave the premises by police.

Finally on May 16, the protectors were arrested, when, in violation of international law, US federal agents in swat-style gear raided the sovereign Venezuelan embassy.

Judge Howell’s pre-trial decisions to severely limit the defense from putting the arrest in context ensured a bias that many observers considered impossible to overcome in a jury trial. The embassy defenders were not allowed to say that Nicolás Maduro is the president of Venezuela.

The defense was not allowed to talk about international law, including the Vienna Convention (which prohibits entry into another country’s embassy, even in times of war). They were not allowed to talk about the protecting power agreement (an agreement for third countries to ensure the safety of embassies in Caracas and DC) that was being negotiated by the US, Switzerland, Turkey, and Venezuela.

They were not allowed to mention that President Maduro, Foreign Minister Jorge Arreaza, Vice Minister Carlos Ron, and UN Ambassador Samuel Moncada had all authorized the activists’ stay in the embassy. They were not allowed to discuss the fact that the Trump and Maduro administrations had been in contact throughout April and May.

They were not allowed to discuss the blatant cooperation between law enforcement and Guaidó supporters in DC. They were not allowed to discuss Guaidó’s corruption and connections to paramilitary drug cartels. They were not allowed to question Guaidó’s legitimacy.

In short, they were not allowed to tell the whole truth.

The partiality on brazen display against citizens who are supposedly presumed to be innocent made it clear that the US justice system was doing its best to ensure justice would be denied — a true kangaroo court.

The justice system’s subservience to the Trump administration’s attempt to install an unelected president in Venezuela effectively made this court that supports a coup — a kanga-coup court, if you will.

That this trial resulted in a mistrial means that US citizens saw through the farce, just as Venezuelans saw through the farce represented by Juan Guaidó….

Embassy Protection Collective

Venezuelan embassy protectors mistrial court case

Feb. 14, 2020

Palestinians stand in solidarity with the Wet’suwet’en nation

February 13, 2020

 / By Palestinian BDS National Committee (BNC) / Canada

The TransCanada Coastal Gaslink pipeline aims to steal Wet’suwet’en land, use resource extraction to solidify control over Indigenous territories, destroy the environment and violate Indigenous laws.

From the occupied Palestinian territory, we stand in solidarity with the Wet’suwet’en nation and land defenders at the Unist’ot’en Camp and Gidimt’en who continue to resist Canada’s colonial incursions of their unceded territories.

The Palestinian BDS National Committee (BNC), the largest coalition in Palestinian civil society that leads the global BDS movement, sends a message of support to your struggle.

We call on the Palestine solidarity movement in Turtle Island and elsewhere to stand with the Wet’suwet’en nation.

As Palestinians, we have firsthand experience with a colonial power, Israel’s regime of occupation, colonization and apartheid, that systemically works to dispossess, divide and strip us of our lands and resources.

We know too well, from our own experience, that the TransCanada Coastal Gaslink pipeline aims to steal Wet’suwet’en land, use resource extraction to solidify control over Indigenous territories, destroy the environment and violate Indigenous laws. We also know that the Royal Canadian Mounted Police (RCMP) attacks, sanctioned by the Trudeau government, against the Hereditary Wet’suwet’en leadership, matriarchs and land defenders, are used to violate Indigenous sovereignty. The RCMP is employing tactics and equipment similar to Israel’s government, including Caterpillar bulldozers, to seize indigenous lands.

We are deeply grateful for the Wet’suwet’en people for their indomitable spirit, and their tireless defence of the land and water resources. We stand firmly with you in your struggle for your land and ancestral rights.

Palestinians owe the Indigenous peoples of Turtle Island a great debt for teaching us how to resist settler colonialism generation after generation through your powerful resistance, grace and indomitable spirit.

The BNC is committed to building stronger ties of solidarity between our peoples and movements, and we will work with our partners in Turtle Island to make this a reality.

From Palestine to Wet’suwet’en, we stand united with you in the struggle against settler colonialism, racism, corporate criminality and your inalienable rights for justice and self-determination.

We would be honoured to welcome you in Palestine, when the time is right.

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ADC Files Amicus Brief with the US Supreme Court Urging Damages Accountability for Religious Discrimination

ADC | 1705 Desales St NW Suite 500, Washington, D.C. 20036 | (202) 244-2990 | adc@adc.org

________________

Washington, D.C. | adc.org | February 13, 2020 – The American-Arab Anti-Discrimination Committee (ADC) filed an amicus brief, in coordination with Harris, Wiltshire & Grannis LLP, with the United States Supreme Court supporting Respondents in Tanzin v. Tanvir. The case involves three Muslim men who were placed or kept on the No-Fly List in retaliation for refusing to spy on their communities. The men in the case were approached by FBI agents and asked to spy generally on their communities, including to visit online Islamic forums and “act extremist.” They were told that spying on their communities could keep them from being placed on the No-Fly List or get them removed. Each of the men refused because, among other things, spying on their communities, going into mosques under false pretenses went against their religious beliefs.

The Court will consider whether the Religious Freedom Restoration Act (RFRA) allows the men to sue agents for damages for the harm the men suffered as a result of being on the list. The Trump administration has asked the Supreme Court to rule that the federal agents are immune from suit. ADC and the attorneys for the men, say the only way to deter future civil rights violations is to impose penalties for past violations.

Federal law enforcement continues to burden the religious rights of far too many Arab Muslims and others, with impunity. Congress passed RFRA with bipartisan and overwhelming support to safeguard the free exercise of religion. ADC argued that RFRA clearly includes a damages remedy to deter behavior that (a) violates clearly established religious rights and (b) is so shocking that it falls into the very small percentage of cases in which the federal government will not come to the defense of its employee.

ADC Senior Staff Attorney Iman Boukadoum states, “Such behavior ought to be deterred. And, contrary to the government’s claim, no ‘well-intentioned’ federal employee might unwittingly engage in it. Injunctive relief cannot fully compensate aggrieved believers nor adequately deter future violations of their religious rights. Damages are essential to make them whole and to turn the page on an era where faith so often meets suspicion.”

Read the brief filed here. The Supreme Court is set to hear the case on March 24, 2020. Please contact legal@adc.org with questions.

Funeral Arrangements for our friend and comrade Dick Reilly, Irish Internationalist

Information regarding services for Richard “Dick” Reilly: https://www.cooneyfuneralhome.com/obituary/Richard-Reilly

__________________________

It is with great sadness that the AAAN announces the passing of our dear friend and colleague Richard “Dick” Reilly last night after a two year battle with lung cancer.  Dick was a familiar face for anyone who is a part of any of the city’s numerous social justice movements, he could be found on the front lines of almost every rally and every event.  He was especially close to the Chicagoland Palestinian and Arab community where he spent years as a friend, activist, and mentor to many.  We offer our deepest condolences to his partner Christine Geovanis and to the Chicagoland community who has lost a kind, caring, and committed fighter.   Funeral arangements will be announced to our list as soon as they are made. Rest in peace dear friend you will be truly missed.

Sincerely,

The Arab American Action Network, https://www.facebook.com/AAAN.Markaz/

Dick Reilly, Center, At Pro-Palestine march

Randi Nord: ‘U.S. Imperialism and the Working Class’

The following talk was presented to over 500 people gathered in Detroit at an annual celebration of the legacy of Dr. Martin Luther King, Jr. Randi Nord, editor of Geopolitics Alert delivered this message on January 20, 2020 at the historic St. Matthew’s/St. Joseph’s Episcopal Church. https://geopoliticsalert.com/

Many people don’t realize this, but the United States is a massive empire.

In the decades following World War II, Washington strategically replaced the British Empire as the world’s violent right-wing imperial force. This comes at the expense of innocent people just like you and me in countries like Iraq, Yemen, Iran, Jordan, and Libya. In Latin America stretching from Chile to Cuba and Mexico. In Asian countries like Korea, Vietnam, and Japan. And even in Europe.

Throughout every corner of the globe, people are denied their God-given rights to political self-determination, economic freedom, and basic human dignity so US capital can expand its empire. Trade deals like NAFTA, the TPP, and whatever Trump’s coming up with seek only to benefit the ruling class while leaving us workers fighting each other for scraps. 

We hear a lot about immigration, borders, and walls, but make no mistake, there are no borders in the chronic expansion of US capital interests. 

This global pursuit of capital also comes at the expense of the working class here at home.

For starters, the US empire is heavily subsidized by our tax dollars against our will. Every week, at least a quarter of your paycheck is seized by the US government to fund this war machine. We know all too well that money doesn’t go to food programs, healthcare, schools, infrastructure, jobs, or anything to benefit the needs of the people. It goes to maintaining the empire and subsidizing US weapons manufacturers so they can kill and infringe on the rights of people like you and meI around the world to the tune of over one trillion dollars each year.

In turn, these weapons we fund to expand the US capital empire abroad are then turned on us here at home. Sometimes when we dare step out of line in cases like Standing Rock or Ferguson. Other times, for no reason at all other than existing. 

The empire is extremely united against the working class. Not only do police departments receive surplus military and surveillance equipment, but they also routinely travel to occupied Palestine to train with the Israeli Occupation Forces and learn their genocidal tactics to use against us here at home. 

It’s also worth mentioning that the United States military is the world’s number one polluter. Drone strikes on civilian homes in Yemen and aircraft carriers floating around the South China Sea 24/7 are absolutely not eco-friendly. 

We see this destruction literally in our own backyards with the pollution of our fresh water sources with PFAS and other military runoff chemicals. And I have no doubt that the water problem is much worse than we’re lead to believe. 

The people of Iran, Iraq, Yemen, Venezuela, Mexico, and each of the countless countries hosting US military bases are not our enemies. This is why we must oppose the empire at every turn, whether in Iran, Cuba, Syria, Libya, Lebanon, or China. 

Not only for the sake of people around the world, but for us here at home and the future of the world.

Geopolitics Alert

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Organizations Condemn Military Presence in El Salvador’s Congress

POSITION REGARDING EVENTS THAT OCCURRED IN EL SALVADOR ON
FEBRUARY 9, 2020

  1. On Sunday February 9, 2020, El Salvador’s President, Nayib Armando Bukele Ortez, entered the Blue Room of the Legislative Assembly, accompanied by members of the Armed Forces. This was due to the call of the Council of Ministers, over which the President presides, for an extraordinary session designed to approve a loan of USD 109 million to finance the so-called Territorial Control Plan Phase III. This Plan consists of strengthening the equipment of public and military security apparatus in the country.
  2. This event is a clear demonstration of authoritarianism and militarization by El Salvador’s President, who is making use of his position to use repressive forces to impose his will on an independent body of government such as the Legislative Assembly. The presence of members of the military in the assembly hall is an act of intimidation and a manifest coaction of the will of Salvadoran representatives.
  3. The repressive apparatus of the State that has been used historically to repress the Salvadoran people by each government of turn are now used to impose legal decrees upon other government bodies. This behavior is common to military dictatorships imposed throughout our Abya Yala.
  4. El Salvador is currently suffering an authentic social war as a result of economic exclusion caused by the neoliberal model imposed since the end of the civil war. This must be addressed by overcoming the structural causes that caused the war and not through strengthening its apparatus of repression. Thus, the loan the President of the Republic is requesting will not solve anything about the current situation of insecurity the Salvadoran people suffer; by contrast, it will further promote persecution of and violence against the organized popular movement and the population in general.
  5. We condemn the warmongering intentions of the current Salvadoran President and the use of the Armed Forces to impose his will.
  6. The Salvadoran people, aware of the process of militarization underway, led by President Bukele, call on the popular organizations of Abya Yala to speak out and accompany this denouncement of the dictatorial actions of the current executive.

San Salvador, February 2020

Signed: Movimiento Nuevo Pais, Movimiento Victoriano Lorenzo, Colectivo Agrario Abya Yala, Festivales Solidarios, Artis Paz Artistas, SOA Watch, Somos Abya Yala, Radio Adesalambrar, and Servicio Internacional Cristiano de Solidaridad con los pueblos de América Latina (SICSAL).

SEE PHOTOS: The day that El Salvador’s Legislative Assembly was militarized

TAKE ACTION: Please join us and sign this letter by our compas at CISPES to let your Senators and Congressional Representatives know that you are concerned about the dictatorial actions in El Salvador.